After Mabo
By (Author) Tim Rowse
Melbourne University Press
Melbourne University Press
31st December 1988
Australia
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
Indigenous peoples
306.08
Paperback
168
Width 142mm, Height 216mm, Spine 11mm
226g
After Mabo draws on such disciplines as history, political science, anthropology, cultural studies, ecology and archaeology to introduce some dominant critiques of non-Aboriginal ways of perceiving Aboriginality. In After Mabo, Tim Rowse draws on such disciplines as history, political science, anthropology, cultural studies, ecology and archaelogy to introduce some dominant critiques of non-Aboriginal ways of perceiving Aboriginality, focusing on the moral and legal traditions of settlers and indigenous peoples, their different attitudes towards the environment, the institutional heritage of 'Aboriginal welfare', tensions between indigenous cultures and indigenous politics, and the representation of Aboriginal identities by indigenous writers.
Dr Tim Rowse, is the author of Australian Liberalism and National Character, and of Arguing the Arts and editor of Remote Possibilities.