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Book review. Made to matter: White fathers, stolen generations

Version 2 2024-06-17, 21:16
Version 1 2016-11-04, 10:19
journal contribution
posted on 2024-06-17, 21:16 authored by FM Devlin-Glass
The topic of white fathers of Aboriginal children has been a long time coming into focus. Aboriginal mothers and children and their loss by being taken into white custody—these matters have been thoroughly, often heart-rendingly explored in artefacts and documentaries in a variety of genres. The white male progenitors have been much less visible except as occasions of scandal. An Aboriginal child without a known father made the child very vulnerable and, conveniently (from an administrative point of view), able to be drawn into the white ‘care’ system where the state became by proxy the stern father in a process that obliterated Aboriginal kinship claims. Probyn-Rapsey notes perspicaciously that although they are often written about (by Aboriginal relatives, biographers, scholars, government officials, Protectors, white women activists, parliamentarians), the fathers of the children rarely speak in their own voices on the subject of their paternity of mixed race children. This study examines the next best thing: textual traces of them in reports, letters, diaries, novels and especially Aboriginal memoirs.

History

Journal

Australasian journal of Irish studies

Volume

14

Pagination

152-155

Location

Murdoch, W.A.

ISSN

1837-1094

Language

eng

Publication classification

X Not reportable, C4 Letter or note

Copyright notice

2014, Murdoch University

Publisher

Murdoch University

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