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y separately published work icon Australian Aboriginal Studies periodical issue   peer reviewed assertion
Issue Details: First known date: 1991... no. 1 1991 of Australian Aboriginal Studies est. 1983 Australian Aboriginal Studies
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Contents

* Contents derived from the , 1991 version. Please note that other versions/publications may contain different contents. See the Publication Details.
Paperbark : A Collection of Black Australian Writings; Holocaust Island; Love Poems and Other Revolutionary Actions, David Headon , single work essay

'In a media release early in 1990, the University of Queensland Press (UQP) launched the 'Black Australian Writers' series, suggesting that the aim was to 'open new and exciting opportunities in Black writing'. Such opportunities, of course, have been well and truly opened up for the best part of a decade, thanks to the resolve of publishing houses such as Fremantle Arts Centre Press, Allen and Unwin, Currency, Penguin and, of course, the Aboriginal Studies Press.' (Introduction)

(p. 76-78)
[Review Essay] Land of Promises : Aborigines and Development in the East Kimberley, Bill Arthur , single work essay

'Generally speaking, purely anthropological studies of Aboriginal Australia have tended to focus on the language group, or incorporated community, as the Unit of analysis...'  (Introduction)

(p. 81-84)
[Review Essay] Growing up Walgett, Joy Kinslow-Harris , single work essay

'Growing Up Walgett is easy to read, with just over 85 pages of large print. It is a book which grew out of students' letters to their non-Aboriginal teacher, Cilka Zagar, to combat her boredom during the long daily bus ride home from school. A reader's interest is piqued by the colourful cover illustration of scenes of Walgett and by the photographs of people interspersed in the 35 page Foreword and Introduction. Interest continues to be drawn by the characters of the lead-in photographs of the 20 teenagers and young adults whose personal statements make up the remaining 54 page body of the book. There is no disappointment as the reader browses on, for the prose of the pieces lives up to the presentation.'  (Introduction)

(p. 85-86)
[Review Essay] Flinders Ranges Dreaming, John W. Harris , single work essay

'Inhaadi ngalpurlaru yarta— Adnyamatharu. Inhanga Adnyamathanha ikaanggu, adi udnyuidla yanaanggata. (This is our country—Adnyamathanha people's. Adnyamathanha people lived here before the white men came.) Thus begins the imprimatur of a senior Adnyamathanha elder, Claude Demell, to Dorothy Tunbridge's beautiful book, Flinders Ranges Dreaming. This book is about Yura yarta, he tells us, Aboriginal country, his people's country-)'. Here are its stories. They aren't secret. We want you to know them.'  (Introduction)

(p. 86-88)
[Review Essay] The Proud Champions: Australia's Aboriginal Sporting Heroes, Ian Howie-Willis , single work essay

'This book is a useful 'Who Has Been Who ' of Aboriginal achievers in sport, and the index a handy checklist. If an Aboriginal sportsman or woman achieved a state-level or national reputation in any sport up to the mid-1980s, the chances are that they have been included.' (Introduction)

(p. 92-94)
Betty Colbung 20 October 1932- 21 February 1991, Flo Grant , single work obituary

'Betty Colbung passed away in Perth on 21 February 1991 and was buried in Liverpool, Sydney, on the 6 March with a private ceremony for family and close friends at St Luke's Angtican Church, Liverpool.'  (Introduction)

(p. 95-96)
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