Talkin' up to the white woman : Indigenous women and feminism / Aileen Moreton-Robinson.
Publication details: St. Lucia, Qld. : University of Queensland Press, 2020.Edition: 20th anniversary editionDescription: xxv, 256 pages ; 20 cmISBN:- 9780702263101
- 0702263109
- Talking up to the white woman
- Society & Social Sciences
- Aboriginal Australians -- Women
- Social identity
- Research
- Race relations - Representation
- Race relations - Representation - History
- Race relations - Representation - Literature
- History - Biographies - Indigenous
- Gender relations - Feminism
- Social identity - Aboriginality
- Women, Aboriginal Australian
- Women, Aboriginal Australian
- Feminism
- Women, Aboriginal Australian -- Cultural assimilation
- Women, Aboriginal Australian -- Social conditions
- Feminism -- Australia
- Australia
- Australian
- Aboriginal and/or Torres Strait Islander content
- 305.420994 23
- GN666 .M67 2020
Item type | Home library | Collection | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode | Item reserves | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Book | Melbourne Athenaeum Library | Non-Fiction | 305.42 MOR | Available | 071016 |
Includes bibliographical references and index.
Preface / Karen Brodkin -- Introduction: Talkin' the Talk -- Ch. 1. Tellin' It Straight: Self-Presentation Within Indigenous Women's Life Writings -- Ch. 2. Look Out "White Woman": Representations of the White Woman in Feminist Theory -- Ch. 3. Puttem "Indigenous Woman": Representations of the "Indigenous Woman" in White Women's Ethnographic Writings -- Ch. 4. Little Bit Woman: Representations of Indigenous Women in White Australian Feminism -- Ch. 5. White Women's Way: Self-Presentation within White Feminist Academics' Talk -- Ch. 6. Tiddas Speakin' Strong: Indigenous Women's Self-Presentation within White Australian Feminism -- Ch. 7. Conclusion: Talkin' Up to the White Woman.
In this ground-breaking and timeless book, Distinguished Professor Aileen Moreton-Robinson undertakes a compelling analysis of the whiteness of Australian feminism and its effect on Indigenous women. As a Goenpul woman and an academic, she operationalises an Indigenous women's standpoint as she 'talks up', engages with and interrogates western feminism in representation and practice. Through an examination of an extensive range of feminist literature written predominantly by white scholars and activists, Moreton-Robinson demonstrates how whiteness dominates from a position of power and privilege as an invisible norm and unchallenged practice. She illustrates the ways in which Indigenous women have been represented in the publications and teachings of white Australian women. Such renderings of Indigenous lives contrast with the way in which Indigenous women re/present and understand themselves. Persuasive and engaging, Talkin' Up to the White Woman is a timely and necessary argument for the inclusion of Indigenous perspectives in the teachings and practices that impact on Australia's pluralistic society. First published twenty years ago, this new edition proves the continued relevance of this classic work as a critique of the whiteness of western feminism.
Culturally sensitive