W.E.H. Stanner: Selected Writings

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Black Inc., Feb 13, 2024 - History - 304 pages

One of Australia’s finest essayists, the first to cut through ‘the great Australian silence’ to convey the richness and uniqueness of Aboriginal culture to settler Australians

‘The most literate and persuasive of all contributions on Australia’s Indigenous people’ —Marcia Langton

W.E.H. Stanner's words changed Australia. In his 1968 Boyer Lectures he exposed a ‘cult of forgetfulness practised on a national scale’, regarding the fate of First Nations people, for which he coined the phrase ‘the great Australian silence’. And in his essay ‘Durmugam’ he provided an unforgettable portrait of a warrior's attempt to hold back cultural change.

The pieces collected here span Stanner’s career as well as the history of Australian race relations. They reveal the extraordinary scholarship, humanity and vision of one of Australia’s finest essayists. Stanner’s writings remain relevant in a time of reckoning with white Australia’s injustices against Aboriginal people and the path to reconciliation.

With an introduction by Robert Manne

‘Bill Stanner was a superb essayist with a wonderful turn of phrase and ever fresh prose. He always had important things to say, which have not lost their relevance. It is wonderful that they will now be available to a new and larger audience.’ —Henry Reynolds

‘Stanner’s essays still hold their own among this country’s finest writings on matters black and white.’ —Noel Pearson

 

Contents

Robert Manne
1
A Nangiomeri
19
The Dreaming
57
Caliban Discovered
73
The History of Indifference Thus Begins
93
The Aborigines
123
Continuity and Change among the Aborigines
146
After the Dreaming
172
DressRehearsal
225
Aborigines and Australian Society
246
Aboriginal Humour
266
Concluding Thoughts from Aborigines in the Affluent Society
279
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About the author (2024)

William Edward Hanley Stanner was born in Sydney in 1905. Stanner helped to shape the growth of Australian anthropology, and his principal interest was the peoples of Daly River and Port Keats in the Northern Territory. Until the end of his life, he devoted a great deal of time to securing recognition of Aboriginal rights to land. He was a member of the Council for Aboriginal Affairs and, in 1968, he was the ABC's Boyer Lecturer. He was a founding member of the Aboriginal Treaty Committee. He was appointed to the chair of anthropology at the Australian National University and served as head of the department of anthropology and sociology until his retirement in 1970. He died in 1981.

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