Speaking/writing with Aboriginal and settler interrelations: interrogating the mechanisms that work to suppress Indigenous/indigenous voices in the 'Australian' situation

This thesis interrogates the mechanisms that work to suppress Indigenous/indigenous voices in the Australian situation socio- politically, historically and theoretically, to reveal how this suppression is always exceeded. The thesis is cross-disciplinary, engaging critical and cultural studies, crit...

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Main Author: McAllan, Fiona
Format: Text
Language:unknown
Published: Macquarie University 2022
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Online Access:https://dx.doi.org/10.25949/19438616.v1
https://figshare.mq.edu.au/articles/thesis/Speaking_writing_with_Aboriginal_and_settler_interrelations_interrogating_the_mechanisms_that_work_to_suppress_Indigenous_indigenous_voices_in_the_Australian_situation/19438616/1
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spelling ftdatacite:10.25949/19438616.v1 2023-05-15T16:17:01+02:00 Speaking/writing with Aboriginal and settler interrelations: interrogating the mechanisms that work to suppress Indigenous/indigenous voices in the 'Australian' situation McAllan, Fiona 2022 https://dx.doi.org/10.25949/19438616.v1 https://figshare.mq.edu.au/articles/thesis/Speaking_writing_with_Aboriginal_and_settler_interrelations_interrogating_the_mechanisms_that_work_to_suppress_Indigenous_indigenous_voices_in_the_Australian_situation/19438616/1 unknown Macquarie University https://dx.doi.org/10.25949/19438616 In Copyright http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/ Other education not elsewhere classified article-journal ScholarlyArticle Thesis Text 2022 ftdatacite https://doi.org/10.25949/19438616.v1 https://doi.org/10.25949/19438616 2022-04-01T18:25:22Z This thesis interrogates the mechanisms that work to suppress Indigenous/indigenous voices in the Australian situation socio- politically, historically and theoretically, to reveal how this suppression is always exceeded. The thesis is cross-disciplinary, engaging critical and cultural studies, critical race and whiteness theory and indigenous relational ontology. 'First Nations Australians' are identified as indigenous in most discussions (while it is argued this collective is nevertheless a heterogeneous demography). While discussion circulates in and through 'Indigenous/indigenous' and 'settler' interrelations, the focus is on the relations between these collective identities - on the formation of subjectivities and ongoing construction of identity. It is argued that conditions that work to suppress Indigenous/indigenous voices in the general discussion are reproduced when colonising relations continue to construct the dominant perspectival paradigm. It is argued that different worldviews are in play, making sharing and negotiation of difference at the boundaries necessary. I also deconstruct the imposition of colonial sovereignty and theorise a co-sovereign existential relation, fundamental to reciprocal sociality. The thesis theorises ways of speaking 'with', in place of 'for' others, hence resisting and overwhelming the colonising frame. In exploring the relationship between deconstructionist and resistant disciplines from within the Western rationalist paradigm, and Indigenous relational ontologies, I have found that such disciplines, outside of the characteristic binarised thinking modes of the West, share their capacity for change, innovation, creativity and engagement with futurity. This opens productive ground with which to pose the following thesis research question: "Is it possible to theorise and engage an in-relation ethos and consciousness that will allow for the transformation of relations of suppression and subordination to those of reciprocity, mutual respect and engagement, thus providing a model for a transformative and reciprocal sociality?" Text First Nations DataCite Metadata Store (German National Library of Science and Technology)
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spellingShingle Other education not elsewhere classified
McAllan, Fiona
Speaking/writing with Aboriginal and settler interrelations: interrogating the mechanisms that work to suppress Indigenous/indigenous voices in the 'Australian' situation
topic_facet Other education not elsewhere classified
description This thesis interrogates the mechanisms that work to suppress Indigenous/indigenous voices in the Australian situation socio- politically, historically and theoretically, to reveal how this suppression is always exceeded. The thesis is cross-disciplinary, engaging critical and cultural studies, critical race and whiteness theory and indigenous relational ontology. 'First Nations Australians' are identified as indigenous in most discussions (while it is argued this collective is nevertheless a heterogeneous demography). While discussion circulates in and through 'Indigenous/indigenous' and 'settler' interrelations, the focus is on the relations between these collective identities - on the formation of subjectivities and ongoing construction of identity. It is argued that conditions that work to suppress Indigenous/indigenous voices in the general discussion are reproduced when colonising relations continue to construct the dominant perspectival paradigm. It is argued that different worldviews are in play, making sharing and negotiation of difference at the boundaries necessary. I also deconstruct the imposition of colonial sovereignty and theorise a co-sovereign existential relation, fundamental to reciprocal sociality. The thesis theorises ways of speaking 'with', in place of 'for' others, hence resisting and overwhelming the colonising frame. In exploring the relationship between deconstructionist and resistant disciplines from within the Western rationalist paradigm, and Indigenous relational ontologies, I have found that such disciplines, outside of the characteristic binarised thinking modes of the West, share their capacity for change, innovation, creativity and engagement with futurity. This opens productive ground with which to pose the following thesis research question: "Is it possible to theorise and engage an in-relation ethos and consciousness that will allow for the transformation of relations of suppression and subordination to those of reciprocity, mutual respect and engagement, thus providing a model for a transformative and reciprocal sociality?"
format Text
author McAllan, Fiona
author_facet McAllan, Fiona
author_sort McAllan, Fiona
title Speaking/writing with Aboriginal and settler interrelations: interrogating the mechanisms that work to suppress Indigenous/indigenous voices in the 'Australian' situation
title_short Speaking/writing with Aboriginal and settler interrelations: interrogating the mechanisms that work to suppress Indigenous/indigenous voices in the 'Australian' situation
title_full Speaking/writing with Aboriginal and settler interrelations: interrogating the mechanisms that work to suppress Indigenous/indigenous voices in the 'Australian' situation
title_fullStr Speaking/writing with Aboriginal and settler interrelations: interrogating the mechanisms that work to suppress Indigenous/indigenous voices in the 'Australian' situation
title_full_unstemmed Speaking/writing with Aboriginal and settler interrelations: interrogating the mechanisms that work to suppress Indigenous/indigenous voices in the 'Australian' situation
title_sort speaking/writing with aboriginal and settler interrelations: interrogating the mechanisms that work to suppress indigenous/indigenous voices in the 'australian' situation
publisher Macquarie University
publishDate 2022
url https://dx.doi.org/10.25949/19438616.v1
https://figshare.mq.edu.au/articles/thesis/Speaking_writing_with_Aboriginal_and_settler_interrelations_interrogating_the_mechanisms_that_work_to_suppress_Indigenous_indigenous_voices_in_the_Australian_situation/19438616/1
genre First Nations
genre_facet First Nations
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op_rights In Copyright
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op_doi https://doi.org/10.25949/19438616.v1
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