Culture Crisis: Anthropology and Politics in Aboriginal Australia
By (Author) Jon Altman
Edited by Melinda Hinkson
NewSouth Publishing
NewSouth Publishing
1st September 2010
Australia
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
Central / national / federal government policies
Indigenous peoples
305.89915
Paperback
304
Width 153mm, Height 234mm
In 2007 the Australian government recognised that the health, safety and education of the nation's remote Aboriginal citizens were in a state of crisis. Its response was what became known as the Northern Territory Intervention, which sparked a heated national debate about Indigenous disadvantage and autonomy. Moreover, it caused Australian anthropologists to question the contribution of their own discipline. Anthropology has always informed and provoked policy change, and has a tradition of confirming difference. So why did the government assume that Aboriginal culture must be interrupted, reshaped and developed, in order to be successful In Culture Crisis, some of Australia's leading anthropologists put the 'Culture Wars' under the microscope, dissecting the notion of difference and asking whether this is a useful way of looking at the problems remote Indigenous Australians face. An urgently needed dialogue, this book unflinchingly confronts the policies that have failed these communities and shows how the discipline of anthropology can still provide hope.
Jon Altman is a social scientist and an Australian Research Council Australian Professorial Fellow at the Center for Aboriginal Economic Policy Research. Melinda Hinkson is an anthropology professor and the chairman of the Visual Culture Research program at the Australian National University. She is the coeditor of An Appreciation of Difference: WEH Stanner and Aboriginal Australia. They are the coeditors of Coercive Reconciliation: Stabilise, Normalise, Exit Aboriginal Australia.