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Description
(Table of content)
Contents
Gigi Adair and Anja Schwarz
Postcolonial Justice in Australia and the 'Fair Go': An Introduction 1
Peter Kilroy
Postcolonial Justice? Recognition, Redistribution and the 'Mabo' Legacy 17
Michael Pickering
Colonial Legacies: Is Repatriation of Remains an Act of Postcolonial Justice? 29
Yann Le Gall
The Return of Human Remains to the Pacific:
The Resurgence of Ancestors and the Emergence of Postcolonial Memory Practices 45
Hannah Lili Boettcher
Contemporary Artistic Articulations of Aboriginal Rights:
The Work of Daniel Boyd 61
Khadija von Zinnenburg Carroll
Partially Proclaimed: Pictographic Law in the 1830 Tasmanian Picture Boards,an Exhibition History 73
Amelie Bernzen and Paul Kristiansen
Challenges for Organic Agriculture in Australia: Getting a 'Fair Go' 91
Boris Braun and Fabian Sonnenburg
Australia's Geography of Joblessness:
Local Job Deficits and Public Policy in Sydney, Melbourne and Brisbane 109
Michael Ackland
A Working-man's Paradise? Christina Stead's Verdicton Antipodean Socialism and Injustice 127
Lioba Schreyer
A "Cry for Justice": Mabo and Poetry 139
Victoria Herche
'Rights of Passage': Exploring the Liminal Position of Indigenous Australian Youth
in Warwick Thornton's Samson and Delilah (2009) and Ivan Sen's Toomelah (2011) 151
About the Contributors 163
(Text)
Die Reihe KOALAS thematisiert und dokumentiert den Wandel europäischer Australien-Perspektiven vom populären Klischee zur wissenschaftlich fundierten Kenntnis. Sie wird getragen von der Gesellschaft für Australienstudien e.V., der interdisziplinären wissenschaftlichen Organisation, die es sich zur Aufgabe gemacht hat, Australienstudien in den deutschsprachigen Ländern auf breiter Basis zu fördern und ihre Entwicklung in Forschung und Lehre zum allgemeinen Nutzen voranzutreiben.This volume presents a collection of ten selected and expanded papers of the 2014 conference of the Association for Australian Studies (GASt) in Potsdam and Berlin. They are supplemented by a comprehensive introduction to the complex ways in which the universal notion of justice is continuously renegotiated against the local and cultural particularities of the Australian context. Often - though not exclusively - concerned with the legacy of Australia's colonial past, the contributions address questions of access and redistribution, obligation and recognition, reparation and restitution, reimagination, reconciliation and forgiveness. The concept of the 'fair go', often posited as a key truth of Australian identity, promises a unique take on these issues. Together, the contributions combine historical depth and a breadth of disciplinary backgrounds with an ethical commitment to the possibility of a 'fair go' for all.