Sister Girl: Reflections on Tiddaism, Identity and Reconciliation

Sister Girl: Reflections on Tiddaism, Identity and Reconciliation

  • Downloads:7045
  • Type:Epub+TxT+PDF+Mobi
  • Create Date:2022-02-17 04:51:32
  • Update Date:2025-09-06
  • Status:finish
  • Author:Jackie Huggins
  • ISBN:0702265470
  • Environment:PC/Android/iPhone/iPad/Kindle

Summary

The pieces in this seminal collection represent almost four decades of writing by historian and activist Jackie Huggins。 These essays, speeches, and interviews combine both the public and the personal in a bold trajectory tracing one Murri woman’s journey towards self-discovery and human understanding。 As a widely respected cultural educator and analyst, Huggins offers an Aboriginal view of the history, values, and struggles of Indigenous people。 Sister Girl reflects on many important and timely topics, including identity, activism, leadership, and reconciliation。 It challenges accepted notions of the appropriateness of mainstream feminism in Aboriginal society and of white historians writing Indigenous history。 Jackie Huggins’ words, then and now, offer wisdom, urgency and hope。

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Reviews

Viola

Interview with the author Jackie Huggins on community radio 📻 3CR programme Women On The Line broadcast Monday 31st January 2022。 Last week’s show preparing for the 50th anniversary of the Aboriginal Tent Embassy on 26th January aka Day of Morning, Invasion Day, Survival Day。。。。。。。。。The Aboriginal Tent Embassy was founded 50 years ago on Invasion day, January 26, in 1972。 It is the world's longest ongoing protest camp。In this episode, we air some archival audio from 1992 on the 20-year anniversa Interview with the author Jackie Huggins on community radio 📻 3CR programme Women On The Line broadcast Monday 31st January 2022。 Last week’s show preparing for the 50th anniversary of the Aboriginal Tent Embassy on 26th January aka Day of Morning, Invasion Day, Survival Day。。。。。。。。。The Aboriginal Tent Embassy was founded 50 years ago on Invasion day, January 26, in 1972。 It is the world's longest ongoing protest camp。In this episode, we air some archival audio from 1992 on the 20-year anniversary and from 2012 on the 40-year anniversary。 We hear the voice of Dr Roberta ‘Bobbi’ Sykes, an excerpt of an interview with the late Aunty Pat Eatock from @3CR’s coverage of 2012 Embassy’s 40th anniversary, and 'The Dispossessed' a poem presented by the late Aunty Oodgeroo Noonuccal。 Afterwards, we hear part of a conversation, first published on Instagram Live, on the Embassy's history and reflections on the misinformation circulating around recent events at the Old Parliament House in Canberra。 The conversation is between FirstNations Wiradjuri poet and podcaster Lorna Munro, who lives on Gadigal lands, and Ngambri woman Leah House。 Lorna has worked on podcasting about gentrification, colonisation and unpacking the colonial playbook in many formats, including the Survival Guide series for Radio Skid Row。The documentary film 🎞 mentioned in the conversation is Ningla A-na。To find out more about the Aboriginal Tent Embassy visit www。atesovereignty。com。auhttps://www。3cr。org。au/womenontheline/episode-202201240830/50-years-aboriginal-tent-embassy 。。。more

Jaclyn (sixminutesforme)

"A new feminism must be constructed which is global and international - to embrace all issues of oppression and not just one of its manifestations。 It must have open and egalitarian lines of communication and respect for the cultural diversity of oral and written forms of expression。 Its revolutionary zeal should enable the freedom of all women - not just the privileged white upper- and middle-class women but those Sisters who do not have access to the rights and pleasures of life enjoyed by so "A new feminism must be constructed which is global and international - to embrace all issues of oppression and not just one of its manifestations。 It must have open and egalitarian lines of communication and respect for the cultural diversity of oral and written forms of expression。 Its revolutionary zeal should enable the freedom of all women - not just the privileged white upper- and middle-class women but those Sisters who do not have access to the rights and pleasures of life enjoyed by so many。 Until this is created we can never call each other 'Sister'。"There is a wealth of learning within this collection of speeches and interviews and essays, while also making way for what Huggins articulates as the "generational shift swamping our nation with articulate, educated and well thought-out arguments from strong young Black women。" It is as much a text carving out space for a more representative and encompassing feminism, while holding a mirror to the failings of white feminism to shift the dial for all women (both historically and ongoing)。 It speaks to active origins of white feminism as an arm of colonisation with their role in commandeering domestic labour and being active players in removals and the Stolen Generations (reminding me a lot of the discussions about the active role of white women in the economics of slavery in They Were Her Property: White Women as Slave Owners in the American South。 It also looks at the fundamental shifts needed in white feminists, namely "meaningful and anti-racist discourses。。。which transcend the barriers that seperate us" and "that white feminists become part of the solution instead of part of the problem。"。 Gender isn't the uniting middle ground that white feminist discourse considers it to be, and Huggins writes in many of these essays particularly on the way race and social issues need to be considered。 A truly engaging read, and one I'd highly recommend if you've read works including the writings of Aileen Moreton-Robinson, Claire G Coleman, Anita Heiss, and Ruby Hamad。 。。。more