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Growing Up Aboriginal in Australia by Anita Heiss
Growing Up Aboriginal in Australia by Anita Heiss






Growing Up Aboriginal in Australia by Anita Heiss Growing Up Aboriginal in Australia by Anita Heiss Growing Up Aboriginal in Australia by Anita Heiss

And yet, reading this ground-breaking anthology as a non-Indigenous person, one is struck by the fact that growing up Aboriginal in Australia often means confronting and negotiating the ongoing structure of colonial invasion, and its eliminatory logic, at a very young age. Indeed, many fully grown white Australian adults balk at thinking about, or even acknowledging, these defining aspects of Australia’s past and present. Not a suitable topic for children, some might think. Heavy stuff, all this talk of invasion and erasure. By demonstrating the continuity between these policies and attitudes and the violence of the frontier, Wolfe famously asserted that colonial invasion is not a single event occurring in the distant past – something over and done with, which everyone should now move on from – but an ongoing structure within colonial societies today, including Australia. Wolfe considered this ‘logic of elimination’ to be one of the defining and persisting features of colonial societies, manifest not only as early-frontier warfare and land expropriation but also as a whole range of subsequent policies and attitudes working towards the erasure, dispossession, or assimilation of Indigenous peoples. The late historian Patrick Wolfe did not pull any punches when he wrote that colonialism seeks to eliminate and replace the Indigenous cultures holding sovereignty over the lands and resources that colonisers wish to claim.








Growing Up Aboriginal in Australia by Anita Heiss