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y separately published work icon Australian Aboriginal Studies periodical issue   peer reviewed assertion
Issue Details: First known date: 1990... no. 1 1990 of Australian Aboriginal Studies est. 1983 Australian Aboriginal Studies
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Contents

* Contents derived from the , 1990 version. Please note that other versions/publications may contain different contents. See the Publication Details.
[Review Essay] The Speaking Land: Myth and Story in Aboriginal Australia, Peter Carroll , single work essay

'This new book from Ronald and Catherine Berndt, based on over forty years of fieldwork with Aboriginal people throughout Australia, reminds us of the link between Aboriginal stories and the land of the story-tellers. It also presents a fascinating national perspective on the traditional life of Aboriginal Austraians.'  (Introduction)

(p. 47-49)
[Review Essay] Survival in Our Own Land: 'Aboriginal' Experiences in 'South Australia' since 1836, Bruce Shaw , single work essay

'Around August 1988 the long awaited South Australian Sesquicentenary (1986) publication Survival in Our Own Land appeared on the shelves of Adelaide's bookshops. This jubilee ISC volume is important in Aboriginal studies for a number of reasons. It is to my knowledge the second only of its kind to make a state-wide overview of Aboriginal history and affairs. The other book of similar proportions was edited by R. and C. Berndt as part of a series of volumes commemorating the Western Australian Sesquicentennial, Aborigines of the West (Berndt and Berndt, 1979). The Western Australian volume was compiled through the work of a large number of contributors who were chiefly white Australians from academic disciplines. There were very few contributors of Aboriginal descent, a lack of representativeness which did not go unnoticed and was at the time a point of criticism.'  (Introduction)

(p. 49-50)
[Review Essay] Dispossession: Black Australians and White Invaders, Peter Read , single work essay

'Professor Reynolds's latest book is the fifth in Allen and Unwin's series entitled 'The Australian Experience' of which Richard Broome's excellent volume, Aboriginal Australians, was the fourth. Though some years have elapsed since the appearance of that book, readers may wonder why the publishers thought it necessary to have two so far out of the series of five on Aboriginal history.'  (Introduction)

(p. 51-52)
[Review Essay] Black Words, White Pages: Aboriginal Literature 1929-1988, R. Bischel , single work essay

'It is not entirely coincidental that these three publications, each dealing with topics until recently more or less neglected by influential literary critics, should appear at almost the same time: to borrow the title of Faith Bandler's novel, 'the time was ripe''  (Introduction)

(p. 52-55)
[Review Essay] The Black Diggers : Aborigines and Torres Strait Islanders in the Second World War, John Curwen Horner , single work essay

'Both text and photographs of The Black Diggers are a revelation. This is the first comprehensive account written of the Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander service men and women of World War II. Among the many photographs there are two of Leonard Waters from Nindigully, South Queensland, an Aboriginal combat pilot who served in Borneo. Aboriginal ground crewmen also served in Northern Australia. Soldiers who went overseas, having enlisted early in the war, included the late Reg Saunders (promoted to Sergeant in mid-1940, and to Lieutenant late in 1944), and Stewart Murray (a Corporal in 1945). Islanders included Charles Mene, Victor Blanco and Ted Loban. Oodgeroo Noonuccal was an AWAS signaler, but Neville Bonner and Willie Thaiday were turned away as recruits, owing to military racial prejudice.'  (Introduction)

(p. 55-57)
[Review Essay] Banggaiyerri : The Story of Jack Sullivan; Countrymen : The Life Histories of Four Aboriginal Men, A. Shnukal , single work essay

'In late 1973, Bruce Shaw began recording the life-histories of several elderly Aboriginal Australians of the East Kimberley region of Western Australia. These two monographs, the result of a long process of transcription, collaborative editing, translation and revision, are the second and third in a series of six proposed volumes, the first of which, My Country of the Pelican Dreaming , appeared in 1981.' (Introduction)

(p. 57-59)
[Review Essay] Jack Davis: A Life-story, Adam Shoemaker , single work essay

'Jack Davis has deserved a biography for many years. There is no doubt that he is one of the most talented and influential Aboriginal authors and, arguably, one of Australia's finest playwrights.

(p. 61-63)
[Review Essay] Paperbark : A Collection of Black Australian Writings, David Headon , single work review
— Review of Paperbark : A Collection of Black Australian Writings 1990 anthology poetry drama short story criticism prose autobiography biography ;
(p. 76-78)
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