September 2002Issue 349



Full Circle

There is no hint of defeatism in this title, no sense of merely ending up where you began. The full circle instead represents the unity and comprehensiveness of the rich, ancient tapestry of indigenous Australian kinship, land and culture and how this has survived decades of forced assimilation.

Edie Wright has compiled the stories of her family over three generations. She uses these oral histories to trace her family’s connection with the remote Kimberley coast and re-establish ties with her Cape York people. Biography fleshes out the daily realities of living as aliens in your own land and provides insight into indigenous history over the entire 20th century.

During three generations her family lived through no fewer than 40 different government acts and amendments, many of which were overwhelming in impact. Government policy dispersed indigenous families, bringing both grief and hardship, and included the forced removal of native children from their families: the ‘stolen generation’.

The scale of this tragedy of displaced lives is only slowly coming to be understood, especially in terms of how powerfully it affects indigenous Australians today. There have been huge disruptions in communities and culture. The tapestry has been scuffed threadbare in some patches and wantonly vandalized in others.

Edie Wright’s style is powerful and unpretentious. Reading these stories is like sitting in on a family get-together – but thanks to her openness and generosity, as a welcome guest rather than voyeur.

Product information
by Edie Wright
Publisher
Fremantle Arts Centre Press
Product number
ISBN 186368329-1
Star rating
***




Language Tools
Powered by Ultralingua

Join over 10,000 people just like you. Get e-mail updates about new content, issue alerts, contests, and more!

other articles
FROM THIS ISSUE

Rice is life

Polyp's Big Bad World – September 2002
Corporate branding with a smile.

A visitor in the mountains
My grandparents’ grave and the rancour of civil war, by Reem Haddad.

Patents on life - The Facts

Abdul Rashid Dostum
Tactically brutal, pragmatically treacherous: Afghan warlord Abdul Rashid Dostum.

recently
IN THIS COLUMN

A Certain Woman
Winner of the best novel prize at Cairo International Book Fair, Hala El Badry writes about her life as an Arabic woman.

9/11 Contradictions
25 contradictions about that day in New York by David Ray Griffin

A River Called Time
The fourth novel of Mozambican author Mia Couto

From A to X: A Story in Letters
A heartrending love-story and a searing indictment of authoritarianism in all its forms.

The Rebels' Hour
Lieve Joris's spellbinding account of the recent ill-starred history of the Democratic Republic of Congo.

The Riddle of Qaf
The Riddle of Qaf is crammed with allusions to classical literature and cod-scientific theories and it makes free (and unapologetic) use of myths and legends.






Voices from the margins:

Multimedia: video, podcasts, and more.