Writing Across a Cultural Interface: A Guide for Non-Indigenous Writers

In recent years non-Indigenous writers have grappled with inclusion and representation of Australian Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples in creative works. Historically, and at times in contemporary fiction, writers have misrepresented, marginalised, or omitted Indigenous people as charact...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Smyth, Elizabeth
Format: Conference Object
Language:unknown
Published: Jawun Research Centre 2024
Subjects:
Online Access:https://researchonline.jcu.edu.au/82944/1/82944.pdf
Description
Summary:In recent years non-Indigenous writers have grappled with inclusion and representation of Australian Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples in creative works. Historically, and at times in contemporary fiction, writers have misrepresented, marginalised, or omitted Indigenous people as characters. Writers who craft regional and rural settings perhaps bear a greater onus than their metropolitan peers to characterise Indigenous people due to an expectation of a greater extent of unbroken Indigenous connections to Country beyond the dense infrastructure of cityscapes. With the rise of First Nations authorship and authority, non-Indigenous writers are often advised to either avoid writing Indigenous characters or to get to know traditional owners and refine their writing skills to achieve authenticity. In this seminar, I offer my experience as a non-Indigenous writer crafting a farm novel that situates Aboriginal characters at the centre of the farm and the narrative. My writing process required constant awareness of a cultural interface and an approach that I hoped would recognise yet not impinge on Indigenous knowledge, beliefs, and authorship. My experience led to the development of seven guidelines that may be useful to other writers.