HORÁKOVÁ, Martina. Ways of Postcolonial Belonging : Writing Spatial History as a Personal Journey. In GAST and ASNEL International Conference 'Postcolonial Justice', 29.5.-1.6. 2014, Potsdam and Berlin. 2014.
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Basic information
Original name Ways of Postcolonial Belonging : Writing Spatial History as a Personal Journey
Authors HORÁKOVÁ, Martina (203 Czech Republic, guarantor, belonging to the institution).
Edition GAST and ASNEL International Conference 'Postcolonial Justice', 29.5.-1.6. 2014, Potsdam and Berlin, 2014.
Other information
Original language English
Type of outcome Presentations at conferences
Field of Study 60206 Specific literatures
Country of publisher Germany
Confidentiality degree is not subject to a state or trade secret
RIV identification code RIV/00216224:14210/14:00083976
Organization unit Faculty of Arts
Keywords in English Intellectual memoir; postcolonial settler belonging in Australia; Peter Read; Mark McKenna
Tags rivok
Tags International impact
Changed by Changed by: Mgr. Jana Pelclová, Ph.D., učo 39970. Changed: 23/2/2018 13:25.
Abstract
In my paper, I will offer a short reflection on a group of narratives written by Australian historians around the turn of the 21st century, narratives which transgress conventional historiography by interweaving elements of academic/intellectual memoir, travelogue, and storytelling. While the personal turn in history writing is neither new nor unique in Australia, these narratives, I believe, are specific in their attempt to articulate one of the many versions of Reconciliation and provide one of the many perspectives on "postcolonial justice" in relation to the dispossession of Indigenous people. I will focus on those aspects of the narratives which express subjectivity, ambivalence, doubt, estrangement, self-reflection, sense of complicity, spatial anxiety and desire of belonging, and lend the narratives the air of an innovative, hybrid mode of writing spatial history. References to Peter Read's Belonging, Mark McKenna's Looking for Blackfella's Point, Inga Clendinnen's Tiger's Eye, Bruce Pascoe's Convincing Ground and Deborah Bird Rose's Reports from a Wild Country will be provided in order to illustrate different ways of transcending what seems to be an impasse in searching for an ethically correct relationship to land and its first peoples in the postcolonial space.
Links
MUNI/A/1246/2014, interní kód MUName: Nové směry v anglofonním jazykovědném a literárním výzkumu III (Acronym: NDALLR3)
Investor: Masaryk University, Category A
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