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Issue Details: First known date: 2022... 2022 The Act of Disappearing : On the Silences That Shroud the Disappearances of Aboriginal Women and Girls
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AbstractHistoryArchive Description

'We do not know how many Aboriginal women have gone 'missing' in this country. The archives are filled with the 'missing': the Aboriginal women who are no longer here to speak; the Aboriginal women who do not have names; the Aboriginal women who do not have graves or places where their families can remember them. There is a comfort that comes with the word 'missing', because to be 'missing' implies that perhaps they have left on their own accord; that there are no perpetrators or violence enacted against them. As Canadian First Nations lawyer and activist Pam Palmater says, the term 'missing' is a misnomer: 'It seems to imply that these women or girls are just lost or ran away for a few days.' 'Missing' also comes with the assumption that the case is still active. When the police speak of 'missing persons', there is an implication that the police are still searching for them, and that they will never tire in their search until those who are 'missing' are found or come back. Because they are still 'missing', the police do not see themselves as responsible for failing to find them; but instead, see the women themselves as 'responsible' for going missing in the first place. There is a term specific to this place, in that women are accused of going 'walkabout', which serves to naturalise their disappearances as innate to Aboriginal culture, and not a distinctly settler-colonial phenomenon.' (Publication abstract)

Notes

  • Epigraph: 

    This woman is Black

    So her blood is shed in silence

    This woman is Black

    So her death falls to earth

    To be washed away with silence and rain

    … I do not even know all their names

    My sisters’ deaths are not noteworthy

    Nor threatening enough to decorate the evening news

    Not important enough to be fossilised

    —Audre Lorde, Need: A Choral of Black Women’s Voices

Publication Details of Only Known VersionEarliest 2 Known Versions of

  • Appears in:
    y separately published work icon Meanjin vol. 81 no. 4 December 2022 25610002 2022 periodical issue

    'Many things play on the mind of the new editor at an old magazine. Top priority: don’t let the thing perish on your watch.

    'And here we are with a new edition of Meanjin, the last of its 81st year, and the last of my editorship. The good news is that there will be another edition next March, this one prepared by the magazine’s new—twelfth—editor, Esther Anatolitis.' (Jonathan Green, Editorial introduction)

    2022
    pg. 20-28
Last amended 6 Jan 2023 08:02:11
20-28 The Act of Disappearing : On the Silences That Shroud the Disappearances of Aboriginal Women and Girlssmall AustLit logo Meanjin
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