Period from first human habitation of the continent of Australia and colonisation in 1788
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Natalie Dormer (Audrey's Children, Game of Thrones) headlines a legend from Aboriginal Australia about a bright, bold bird and the illuminating power of teamwork.
Aboriginal Australian cultures existed separate from the rest of the world for thousands of years. Their stories tell of verifiable events from millennia ago; they also tell of a time outside of time, called the Dreaming. Stories from the Dreaming, also called Dreamtime, are deeply connected to the earth, and tell of our connections to it as well. The stories presented here give perspectives from cultures radically different from most others, providing insight into that which is uniquely and universally human.Mythos & Logos are two ancient words that can be roughly translated as “Story & Meaning.”Support the channel by subscribing, liking, and commenting to join the conversation!Support the channel financially through your generous Patreon donation: patreon.com/mythosandlogosThis channel is a collection of thoughts of one person on the important stories that we humans have shared with each other. I believe that, in respectfully approaching storytelling traditions, we can find timeless wisdom and beauty that apply to modern life. I do my best to find and share that wisdom. I encourage you to share your thoughts and stories as well.The stories presented here have all been freely shared by their original tellers. I encourage you to study each story directly and consult traditional sources whenever possible.00:00 Note for Viewers of Aboriginal Australian and Torres Islander Heritage00:33 Charity Announcement01:00 Introduction01:09 An Area at the Bank of the Murray River by Gustav Mützel01:29 Illustration from More Australian Legendary Tales by K Langloh Parker, illustrated by Tommy McRae02:05 Global Sea Levels During the Last Ice Age from the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration02:43 Corroboree Dance drawn by Aflred T Agate, engraved by E G Dunnell03:29 Shaping The Land04:52 The Two Methods of Making Fire by Gustav Mützel05:06 Coast Scene Near Rapid Bay by George French Angas05:41 Two Loggerhead or Green Sea Turtles, a Muskrat, and Shells by Joris Hoefnagel05:54 Mount Wellington and Hobart Town from Kangaroo Point by John Glover06:17 Bill Neidjie, Story About Feeling07:24 Illustration from Australian Legendary Tales by K Langloh Parker, illustrated by Tommy McRae07:51 Musical Maps08:02 Map of Australia from Nordisk Familjebok08:57 Illustration from More Australian Legendary Tales by K Langloh Parker, illustrated by Tommy McRae09:07: Funeral of a Native; A Bark Coffin from The Euahlayi Tribe by K Langloh Parker09:28 Mount Arapiles and the Mitre Rock by Nicholas Chevalier09:40 K Langloh Parker, The Euahlayi Tribe11:04 Baiame Cave, Milbrodale, Hunter Valley, NSW, Australia, photographed by Sardaka, licensed under Creative Commons11:26 Baiame Cave, Milbrodale, Hunter Valley, NSW, Australia, photographed by Sardaka, licensed under Creative Commons11:53 Written in the Sky12:05 Willy Wagtail photographed in Brassall Queensland Australia by A.Wutke, licensed under Creative Commons12:13 Sittella leucocephala from Reichenbach Icongraphia12:34 Landscape with Noah, Offering a Sacrifice of Gratitude by Joseph Anton Koch and Gottleib Schick13:02 Wagtail Singing, photographed by Benjamint444, licensed under Creative Commons13:09 Wagtail Nest, photographed by Benjamint444, licensed under Creative Commons13:14 Sittella leucocephala from Reichenbach Icongraphia13:40 A Billabong of the Goulburn, Victoria, by Henry James Johnstone13:54 At the lower Murray River in South Australia, the deceased is wrapped in a blanket with his weapons and favourite items, placed on a frame and left lying in the sun, by William Blandowski14:13 Dasyurus maculatus photographed by Leonard G14:36 Conclusion: Important Story This16:07 Bill Neidjie, Story About Feeling (Image: Aboriginal Carved Trees, photographed by Henry King)All works of art are in the public domain unless stated otherwise.Ambiment - The Ambient by Kevin MacLeod is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution license.
Nyul Nyul and Nyikina man Jason Hunter shares his journey of learning about the true history of his family: stolen land, people massacred, children stolen, lives controlled. He encourages all listeners to understand this is our shared history and our shared responsibility to change Aboriginal Australia's future. Content Warning: These stories may include triggering content for Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people. So, if you're struggling while listening to this story, please don't hesitate to connect with 13 YARN on 13 92 76 and talk with an Aboriginal or Torres Strait Islander crisis supporter. ABOUT THE COLLECTION: Truth Telling in Walyalup is a collection of stories from Indigenous and non-Indigenous Australians that were shared in local resident's backyards all around Walyalup/Fremantle. The stories were reflections about Australia's shared colonial history and imagining a better future toward reconciliation. These stories were produced in partnership with and made possible by generous funding from the City of Fremantle. Find out more about their reconciliation journey and truth telling program at www.fremantle.wa.gov.au. In this collection, you will hear live recordings from people who spoke about difficult truths, hidden histories and reimagined futures, all reflections of their lived experiences of colonisation in Walyalup and beyond. To support Centre for Stories in helping more important truths to be told and share, please consider donating or partnering with us. You can find out more about Centre for Stories at www.centreforstories.com. This episode was narrated and produced by Luisa Mitchell from Centre for Stories. Original music and sound engineering by Mason Vellios. Live recording by Cobie Mason.
Life, Culture and Current Events from a Biblical perspective.Your support sends the gospel to every corner of Australia through broadcast, online and print media: https://vision.org.au/donateSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
In Australia, due to the country's system of mandatory voting, turnout for federal elections is around 90%, but in many remote Aboriginal communities, it's far lower. As part of our Democracy Solutions Project, Reset executive producer Dan Tucker traveled to the town of Yuendumu in Australia's vast Northern Territory to understand why voters stay away from the polls and what it says about political representation in the country. For a full archive of Reset interviews, head over to wbez.org/reset.
COLD DESERT NIGHT talks of the Australian desert, The Australian Aboriginal beliefs and stories from my point of view. COLD DESERT NIGHT is the latest Dave Price / The Olive Army song release. It's a song that has a story that I would love you to hear. On this episode I tell the story of how the inspiration of the song came to me, who played on the song and some challenges that came up that I've never had to think about when songs in the past. For me, songs tend to write themselves. I'm just the conduit between the thought and what gets played out of your speakers. More often than not the end result is completely different to what I had in mind when I started. This means the song can often feel as new to me as it does to you. I hope you enjoy my latest song “COLD DESERT NIGHT”.
We had the chance to catch up with Gamilaraay artist MitchTambo to talk about the Walanbaa Youth Tour. Mitch was touring the New England area this week, teaching kids about cultural diversity and empowering them to make positive choices in their lives.
Kenny Curtis (Greeking Out) stars in a legend from Aboriginal Australia about dark days, light humor, and a little bird with a big laugh.
This week, the one and only Cate Blanchett joins Mark and Simon for a chat about her drama ‘The New Boy', which follows a young Aboriginal Australia orphan, who is brought into a Christian monastery, run by a renegade nun, begin to question his faith and loyalty to his heritage. Mark gives his take on the film, as well as reviewing ‘Monster', a Japanese psychological mystery thriller about a mother who confronts a teacher after noticing disturbing changes in her son's behaviour; and ‘Drive Away Dolls', an Ethan Coen-helmed road trip caper about two lesbian friends who get caught up in crime. Plus, Mark and Simon keep us abreast of the cinematic events happening around the country. Timecodes (relevant only for the Vanguard - who are also ad-free!): 08:23 Monster review 23:27 Box Office Top 10 37:28 Cate Blanchett interview 52:03 The New Boy review 57:23 Laughter Lift 01:02:48 Drive-Away Dolls review 01:09:23 What's On You can contact the show by emailing correspondence@kermodeandmayo.com or you can find us on social media, @KermodeandMayo EXCLUSIVE NordVPN Deal ➼ https://nordvpn.com/take Try it risk-free now with a 30-day money-back guarantee! A Sony Music Entertainment production. Find more great podcasts from Sony Music Entertainment at sonymusic.com/podcasts and follow us @sonypodcasts To advertise on this show contact: podcastadsales@sonymusic.com Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Ep. 103 (Part 2 of 2) | “What if I lean into the pain and come out the other side and survive it—and what if I take you with me, as the reader, and together we deal with our pain?” asks Tyson Yunkaporta, author, senior research fellow, founder of the Indigenous Knowledge Systems Lab. Tyson embodies this era of metacrisis, actively working with the global issues of our time in his work and in his personal life. His books are paradigm rattling and his whole life is a contribution—bringing forth ways in which Aboriginal Indigenous knowledge can help us, stating the need to find a collective narrative we can all agree on in order to survive, expressing himself with utter authenticity, and pointing out emphatically that each one of us is a web of relations, and that's what matters most.In his own uniquely raw, unguarded, authentic (and funny) way, Tyson describes his personal challenges with mental health and bipolar disorder and the states of mind he was in when he wrote his two books. Sand Talk: How Indigenous Thinking Can Save the World, was written in just weeks while manic. In dramatic contrast, Right Story, Wrong Story: Adventures in Indigenous Thinking was written while wrestling with depression. Tyson talks about disinformation and how we collectively need to get to the “right story;” about Aboriginal culture and what it means to be living in a colony; the amazing psycho-technologies Aboriginals have to deal with grief; the radicalization and polarization exacerbated by COVID lockdowns in Australia; the similarity between Indigenous knowledge and the scientific method; the sacredness of magic and how this cannot be scaled. Tyson is a window into Aboriginal Indigenous knowledge and a brilliant translator of that wisdom for the rest of us. Recorded September 21, 2023.“Everything you are is a web of relations – you are a relational net.”(For Apple Podcast users, click here to view the complete show notes on the episode page.)Topics & Time Stamps – Part 1Introducing artist, academic, author, podcast host, and founder of the Indigenous Knowledge Systems Lab, Tyson Yunkaporta (01:21)Aboriginal & white Australia is really just one world, with Australia squatting on top: living in the overlap space of the Venn diagram (02:50)How we survive: Aboriginal culture has amazing psychotechnologies of mourning and excels at cultivating humor to effectively heal the grief from facing death so often (05:45) How the Aboriginals were indirectly responsible for the first corporation after spearing Dutchmen 500 years ago (06:57)Tyson's new book, Right Story, Wrong Story spends a lot of time refuting his first book, Sand Talk (09:20)Sand Talk was written in a bipolar/manic episode in 2 weeks flat—it includes a lot of solid Indigenous wisdom as well as propaganda about Western institutions (09:51)Right Story/Wrong Story was written in a state of suicidal depression modeled on Dante's Inferno (13:14)The effects of COVID and the harshest lockdowns on the planet on Aboriginal Australia & on Tyson (14:11)Right Story/Wrong Story looks at disinformation: how can we collectively get to the right story? (16:10)Tyson explains his mental health challenges and the paradox of being dependent on Western medicine and other Western institutions (17:55)The capacity to laugh is what gets you through (22:16)The neurological capacity of an echidna (22:58)How secular gurus, influencers, are nudging people in horrible directions like fascism, autocracy, exclusionary politics (24:31) People get...
Ep. 102 (Part 1 of 2) | “What if I lean into the pain and come out the other side and survive it—and what if I take you with me, as the reader, and together we deal with our pain?” asks Tyson Yunkaporta, author, senior research fellow, founder of the Indigenous Knowledge Systems Lab. Tyson embodies this era of metacrisis, actively working with the global issues of our time in his work and in his personal life. His books are paradigm rattling and his whole life is a contribution—bringing forth ways in which Aboriginal Indigenous knowledge can help us, stating the need to find a collective narrative we can all agree on in order to survive, expressing himself with utter authenticity, and pointing out emphatically that each one of us is a web of relations, and that's what matters most.In his own uniquely raw, unguarded, authentic (and funny) way, Tyson describes his personal challenges with mental health and bipolar disorder and the states of mind he was in when he wrote his two books. Sand Talk: How Indigenous Thinking Can Save the World, was written in just weeks while manic. In dramatic contrast, Right Story, Wrong Story: Adventures in Indigenous Thinking was written while wrestling with depression. Tyson talks about disinformation and how we collectively need to get to the “right story;” about Aboriginal culture and what it means to be living in a colony; the amazing psycho-technologies Aboriginals have to deal with grief; the radicalization and polarization exacerbated by COVID lockdowns in Australia; the similarity between Indigenous knowledge and the scientific method; the sacredness of magic and how this cannot be scaled. Tyson is a window into Aboriginal Indigenous knowledge and a brilliant translator of that wisdom for the rest of us. Recorded September 21, 2023.“If you can get a fellow like me to line up and share a narrative with everybody else and an agreement on what is real and what is not in the world, then I guess there's going to be hope for everybody.”(For Apple Podcast users, click here to view the complete show notes on the episode page.)Topics & Time Stamps – Part 1Introducing artist, academic, author, podcast host, and founder of the Indigenous Knowledge Systems Lab, Tyson Yunkaporta (01:21)Aboriginal & white Australia is really just one world, with Australia squatting on top: living in the overlap space of the Venn diagram (02:50)How we survive: Aboriginal culture has amazing psychotechnologies of mourning and excels at cultivating humor to effectively heal the grief from facing death so often (05:45) How the Aboriginals were indirectly responsible for the first corporation after spearing Dutchmen 500 years ago (06:57)Tyson's new book, Right Story, Wrong Story spends a lot of time refuting his first book, Sand Talk (09:20)Sand Talk was written in a bipolar/manic episode in 2 weeks flat—it includes a lot of solid Indigenous wisdom as well as propaganda about Western institutions (09:51)Right Story/Wrong Story was written in a state of suicidal depression modeled on Dante's Inferno (13:14)The effects of COVID and the harshest lockdowns on the planet on Aboriginal Australia & on Tyson (14:11)Right Story/Wrong Story looks at disinformation: how can we collectively get to the right story? (16:10)Tyson explains his mental health challenges and the paradox of being dependent on Western...
David Pan talks with Stephen Muecke about his article "Belonging in Aboriginal Australia: A Political 'Cosmography,'" from Telos 202 (Spring 2023).
In Friendship (University of Pennsylvania Press, 2023), renowned anthropologist Michael Jackson draws on philosophy, biography, ethnography, and literature to explore the meanings and affordances of friendship—a relationship just as significant as, yet somehow different from, kinship and love. Beginning with Aristotle's accounts of friendship as a political virtue and Montaigne's famous essay on friendship as a form of love, Jackson examines the tension between the political and personal resonances of friendship in the philosophy of Hannah Arendt, the biography of the Indian historian Brijen Gupta, and the oral narratives of a Kuranko storyteller, Keti Ferenke Koroma. He offers reflections on childhood friends, imaginary friends, lifelong friendships, and friendships with animals. He ruminates particularly on the complications of friendship in the context of anthropological fieldwork, exploring the contradiction between the egalitarian spirit of friendship on the one hand and, on the other, the power imbalance between ethnographers and their interlocutors. Through these stories, Jackson explores the unpredictable interplay of mutability and mutuality in intimate human relationships and the critical importance of choice in forming friendship—what it means to be loyal to friends through good times and bad, and even in the face of danger. Through a blend of memoir, theory, ethnography, and fiction, Jackson shows us how the elective affinities of friendship transcend culture, gender, and age and offer us perennial means of taking stock of our lives and getting a measure of our own self-worth. Dr. Jackson is an anthropologist, author, and senior research fellow in world religions at Harvard Divinity School. His academic work has been strongly influenced by critical theory, American pragmatism, and existential-phenomenological thought, and he has conducted extensive fieldwork experience in Sierra Leone and Aboriginal Australia. Latoya Johnson is an editor, writer, and bibliophile with a master's in Humanities. Her research and writing interests include books and reading in popular culture, the public history of women's fiction, and women in Greco-Roman mythology. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://newbooksnetwork.supportingcast.fm/new-books-network
In Friendship (University of Pennsylvania Press, 2023), renowned anthropologist Michael Jackson draws on philosophy, biography, ethnography, and literature to explore the meanings and affordances of friendship—a relationship just as significant as, yet somehow different from, kinship and love. Beginning with Aristotle's accounts of friendship as a political virtue and Montaigne's famous essay on friendship as a form of love, Jackson examines the tension between the political and personal resonances of friendship in the philosophy of Hannah Arendt, the biography of the Indian historian Brijen Gupta, and the oral narratives of a Kuranko storyteller, Keti Ferenke Koroma. He offers reflections on childhood friends, imaginary friends, lifelong friendships, and friendships with animals. He ruminates particularly on the complications of friendship in the context of anthropological fieldwork, exploring the contradiction between the egalitarian spirit of friendship on the one hand and, on the other, the power imbalance between ethnographers and their interlocutors. Through these stories, Jackson explores the unpredictable interplay of mutability and mutuality in intimate human relationships and the critical importance of choice in forming friendship—what it means to be loyal to friends through good times and bad, and even in the face of danger. Through a blend of memoir, theory, ethnography, and fiction, Jackson shows us how the elective affinities of friendship transcend culture, gender, and age and offer us perennial means of taking stock of our lives and getting a measure of our own self-worth. Dr. Jackson is an anthropologist, author, and senior research fellow in world religions at Harvard Divinity School. His academic work has been strongly influenced by critical theory, American pragmatism, and existential-phenomenological thought, and he has conducted extensive fieldwork experience in Sierra Leone and Aboriginal Australia. Latoya Johnson is an editor, writer, and bibliophile with a master's in Humanities. Her research and writing interests include books and reading in popular culture, the public history of women's fiction, and women in Greco-Roman mythology. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://newbooksnetwork.supportingcast.fm/anthropology
In Friendship (University of Pennsylvania Press, 2023), renowned anthropologist Michael Jackson draws on philosophy, biography, ethnography, and literature to explore the meanings and affordances of friendship—a relationship just as significant as, yet somehow different from, kinship and love. Beginning with Aristotle's accounts of friendship as a political virtue and Montaigne's famous essay on friendship as a form of love, Jackson examines the tension between the political and personal resonances of friendship in the philosophy of Hannah Arendt, the biography of the Indian historian Brijen Gupta, and the oral narratives of a Kuranko storyteller, Keti Ferenke Koroma. He offers reflections on childhood friends, imaginary friends, lifelong friendships, and friendships with animals. He ruminates particularly on the complications of friendship in the context of anthropological fieldwork, exploring the contradiction between the egalitarian spirit of friendship on the one hand and, on the other, the power imbalance between ethnographers and their interlocutors. Through these stories, Jackson explores the unpredictable interplay of mutability and mutuality in intimate human relationships and the critical importance of choice in forming friendship—what it means to be loyal to friends through good times and bad, and even in the face of danger. Through a blend of memoir, theory, ethnography, and fiction, Jackson shows us how the elective affinities of friendship transcend culture, gender, and age and offer us perennial means of taking stock of our lives and getting a measure of our own self-worth. Dr. Jackson is an anthropologist, author, and senior research fellow in world religions at Harvard Divinity School. His academic work has been strongly influenced by critical theory, American pragmatism, and existential-phenomenological thought, and he has conducted extensive fieldwork experience in Sierra Leone and Aboriginal Australia. Latoya Johnson is an editor, writer, and bibliophile with a master's in Humanities. Her research and writing interests include books and reading in popular culture, the public history of women's fiction, and women in Greco-Roman mythology. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://newbooksnetwork.supportingcast.fm/sociology
From landscape and geological changes over millennia to the emotional turmoil of colonisation, Australia's indigenous people recorded their history not with written words but in oral tradition and song. Music by Fesliyan Studios Show sponsored by Endless Ink Books and London History Podcast You can support the podcast and get extra content at www.buymeacoffee.com/historyobscura or www.patreon.com/historyobscura Thank you!
Jessie Lloyd is an Aboriginal Australian "Songkeeper," artist and social historian dedicated to honouring the music, sharing the stories and celebrating the culture of Aboriginal Australia and the Torres Strait Islander communities. Through her award-winning Mission Songs Project through to her latest, the Island Songs Project, she has introduced new audiences to Indigenous music and culture in groundbreaking new ways.
Morse code transcription: vvv vvv Why this facial recognition firm is controversial Photographing the diversity of Aboriginal Australia Orsolya Gaal news latest Police offer 3500 reward after NY mother stabbed 60 times and put in duffle bag US spring snow storm leaves 300,000 in the dark As DeSantis administration rejects textbooks, only one publisher allowed for K 5 math classes in Florida Florida Gov. DeSantis Seeks to End Walt Disney Worlds Special Tax District Biden reverses Trump to restore environmental law on highways, bridges, other projects Kabul blasts kill six and wound 20 at boys school Timed Teaser Whats Elon Musks valuation of Twitter Do you have to wear a mask on your next flight These airlines are dropping mask mandates Russia sets new Mariupol ultimatum in Battle of Donbas as West pledges more help DOJ says it will appeal to revive mask mandate if the CDC determines its still needed Home Depot fire Officials identify Dyllin Jaycruz Gogue as suspect who intentionally started massive 5 alarm blaze in San Jose Biden administration gives more borrowers chance of debt cancellation Ukraine war Kyivs allies pledge more weapons to help win war Netflix loses subscribers for first time in more than 10 years Boris Johnson denies deliberately misleading MPs over parties Russia tells Ukrainian forces to surrender Azovstal plant by noon Apple staff make bid for first union at a US store Johnny Depp expected to testify at defamation trial
Co-presented with Melbourne Writers' Festival With its descriptions of the sophisticated economic and socio-political livelihoods of many First Nations' communities, Bruce Pascoe's 2014 multi-award-winning Dark Emu called for a reconsideration of pre-colonial Aboriginal Australia. Confronting criticism from some who reject its portrayal of Aboriginal agriculturalists, and following the COVID-cancellation of their anticipated Melbourne Writers' Festival session, Bruce and eminent historian Tom Griffiths (The Art of Time Travel) come together to consider the productive conversation emerging around Australia's understanding of Aboriginal histories, and discuss the best way to deepen our shared knowledge of our nation's vital first stories.
Elisabeth and Katie talk about the Magnolia Book Awards, a Mississippi based award for children's and young adult books. Learn what the award is and hear Elisabeth and Katie talk about some of their favorite nominations! Link to the 2022 Magnolia Book Awards page: https://mschildrensmuseum.org/parent-community-resources/magnolia-book-awards/ Full list of nominations for the 2022 Magnolia Book Awards: PRE-K - 2ND GRADE Feast of Peas written by Kashmira Sheth; illustrated by Jeffrey Ebbeler Kaia and the Bees written by Maribeth Boelts; illustrated by Angela Dominguez Nana Says I Will Be Famous One Day written by Ann Stott; illustrated by Andrew Joyner Arlo the Lion Who Couldn't Sleep written & illustrated by Catherine Rayner The Camping Trip written & illustrated by Jennifer K. Mann The Stars Just Up the Street written by Sue Soltis; illustrated by Christine Davenier Hat Tricks written & illustrated by Satoshi Kitamura If Winter Comes, Tell It I'm Not Here written & illustrated by Simona Ciraolo I'm Trying to Love Math written & illustrated by Bethany Barton 3RD - 5TH GRADE Bringing Back the Wolves: How a Predator Restored an Ecosystem written by Jude Isabella; illustrated by Kim Smith Becoming Mahammad Ali written by James Patterson & Kwame Alexander; illustrated by Dawud Anyabwile Ghost Squad written by Claribel A. Ortega Like Nothing Amazing Ever Happened written by Emily Blejwas Foreverland written by Nicole C. Kear Winterborne Home for Vengeance and Valor written by Ann Carter Birrarung Wilam: A Story from Aboriginal Australia written by Aunty Joy Murphy & Andrew Kelly; illustrated by Lisa Kennedy The Secret Time Machine and the Gherkin Switcheroo written & illustrated by Simone Lia The Candy Mafia written by Lavie Tidhar; illustrated by Daniel Duncan 6TH - 8TH GRADE The Missing: The True Story of My Family in World War II written by Michael Rosen Zora & Me: The Summoner written by Victoria Bond Daring Darleen Queen of Screen written by Ann Nesbet Caterpillar Summer written by Gillian McDunn The List of Things That Will Not Change written by Rebecca Stead 96 Miles written by J.L. Esplin Boys in the Back Row written by Mike Jung Black Brother, Black Brother written by Jewell Parker Rhodes 9TH -12TH GRADE The Inheritance Games written by Jennifer Lynn Barnes This is My America written by Kim Johnson The Grace Year written by Kim Liggett Punching the Air written by Ibi Zoboi & Yusef Salaam Stamped written by Jason Reynolds & Ibram X. Kendi You Should See Me in a Crown written by Leah Johnson
A pod cast by the St. Brigid's Catholic School Evanston Pod Cast Team. Guests: Xavier Thomas, ‘Nanna Corrina' Host: Gennaro Mannella Editor: James Meston - Arch D Radio We acknowledge the support of Reconciliation SA for their equipment funding to make the creation of this work possible.
Darren Moffitt is a Bidjigal man who joins us to discuss his recent work in North-East Victoria as a Recovery Coordinator for Aboriginal Culture and Healing.Darren's role is part of the Black Summer recovery initiative activated by Bushfire Recovery Victoria (BRV) and is one of the first examples of a government program recognising Aboriginal Healing as a dedicated line of recovery within the pillars of disaster recovery.In this conversation, Scotia and Darren discuss:The importance of ensuring Aboriginal voices have a seat at the table when it comes to recovery planning and processesBRV's introduction of a dedicated line of recovery focused on Aboriginal Healing which stands alongside traditional recovery pillars of health, economy, natural environment, and infrastructure, and supports projects led by Aboriginal community organisations and Traditional Owner groupsThe effectiveness and challenges of Victoria's Bushfire Recovery Grants that support Traditional Owner-led recovery projectsThe complexities of identifying and engaging Aboriginal community members who may not always be highly visible within communitiesHow Darren and BRV's work in the North-East to initiate meaningful engagement with Aboriginal community members has been a catalyst for more ongoing positive engagement across health and local government agenciesThe important role of culture and the arts and cultural events such as NAIDOC week to build community connectednessFurther reading and resources:Eastern Victorian Fires 2019-2020, State Recovery PlanAboriginal Culture and Healing, Stories of Bushfire RecoveryThe Conversation: Bushfire recovery hasn't considered Aboriginal culture — but things are finally starting to changeBushfire Recovery VictoriaAustralian Institute of Disaster Resilience, Indigenous Perspectives on Disaster Recovery Webinar
Wiradjuri is the Australian indigenous language of Wiradjuri country, in central-southern New South Wales. As a revival language, it is experiencing growth and provides an important connection to the local indigenous culture; however it also faces significant challenges to keep it alive and active.In this episode, we speak with Wiradjuri man Yaaran (Aaron) Ellis who currently teaches the Wiradjuri language in Young, New South Wales. We chat about his experience of learning and teaching the language, the importance of language as a way of connecting to culture within his own family, sharing Wiradjuri in classrooms and online via social media, the challenges ahead and his hopes for the language's future.This episode was released in NAIDOC Week 2021. We acknowledge the Traditional Custodians of country throughout Australia and their connections to land, sea and community. We pay our respect to their elders past and present and extend that respect to all Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples today. We live on land that was, is and always will be Aboriginal country.Episode LinksFind Yaaran on Instagram: @wiradyuri (look out for #WiradjuriWednesday!) | Twitter: @bigibilaWiradjuri Bali Yarra (Baby Talk) Flashcard SetGraduate Certificate in Wiradjuri Language, Culture and Heritage (Charles Sturt University)AIATSIS - Australian Institute of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander StudiesFirst Languages AustraliaNAIDOC Week
In the Dreamtime, the cluster of stars which we know as the Pleiades were seven beautiful ice maidens. Their parents were a great mountain and an ice-cold stream that flowed from the hills. The seven sisters wandered across the land, their long hair flying behind them like storm clouds. Their beauty was so entrancing that every man who saw them fell in love with them instantly. But the maidens' affections were cold. This episode is also available as a blog post: http://martinifisher.com/2020/04/10/the-maidens-and-the-stars-star-legends-of-aboriginal-australia/
For over two decades, Michele Davies taught in schools in both metropolitan and regional communities across all sectors. She managed visual arts curriculum development (F-12) for the Victorian Curriculum Assessment Authority for six years. A passionate advocate for The Arts and community development, she previously engaged personal and community arts practice alongside advisory roles for community organisations including Red Planet Political Posters and held a co-opted membership to the Board of Regional Arts Victoria.Michele founded Creative Energy Connection after many years of service to community Arts and education. Having experienced the trials and tribulations in membership of many struggling systems she undertook extensive spiritual practice and therapeutic studies. Informed through exchange with Indigenous communities in Aboriginal Australia, India and training from International Teaching Masters of Systemic Constellation Therapy she continues to support others in service of transformation.Creative Energy Connection provides wellbeing solutions for those who feel blocked to progress with life. Therapeutic solutions are delivered through Creative Arts therapy and Family and Systems Constellations therapy. The practice serves to empower healing and assist ease with affirmative direction for Individuals, families and communities ready to thrive. Contact Michele viawww.creativenergyconnection.com
Hear the full interview, as recorded for Lost and Found: Country.
Hear the full interview, as recorded for Lost and Found: Country.
From 8CCC in Central Australia, MJ Bakewell asks: what does ‘justice’ even mean if no one speaks your language? Supervising production from Belinda Lopez. Training from the Community Media Training Organisation. Distributed by the Community Radio Network. Produced for the 2020 CBAA National Features and Documentary Series. There are over 17 Aboriginal languages spoken in and around Alice Springs – but there’s only been an Aboriginal interpreter service since the year 2000. MJ Bakewell looks to the past, and one Yankuntyjatjara man’s legacy, to see how far we’ve come to ensure Aboriginal language speakers have the right to understand, and be understood. Music Trailrunner by Blue Dot Sessions Algorithms by Chad Crouch Passed Tense by Anne van Schothorst Low Coal Camper by Blue Dot Sessions 4th Chair by Blue Dot Sessions. Sound Effects Power Down by peepholecircus hospital_lobby by tim.kahn cassette-tape by albertomarun. Special Thanks Linda Rive for indulging me with her recollections and suggestions Rob Rosenthal for his structural guidance and generous feedback Natalie at AIATSIS for helping me dig out the archive tape Avery special thanks to Karina Lester, who opened her home to me. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Jay Kennedy Harris talks on the BLM protest, Aboriginal culture, integration, common misconceptions and positive ideas for the future.
This week on The Beat Generation, we chat with Shane Howard who guides us through some of the stories of his days in Goanna including the iconic Solid Rock which denounced the injustice that Aboriginal Australia has endured for over 200 years. His music and message has remained a legacy in Australian music encouraging other bands and artists to start writing about the social and environmental injustice. Shane Howard and The Goanna Years features the follow tracks - Dangerous Dancing - Oceania Stand Yr Ground - Spirit of Place Livin' on the Razor's Edge - Livin' on the Razor's Edge EP (1979) Common Ground - Oceania Solid Rock - Spirit of Place Borderline - Spirit of Place Let the Franklin Flow (Live) Check out our Facebook page... https://www.facebook.com/MusicThatChangedTheWorld and our Instagram page... https://www.instagram.com/thebeatgenerationpodcast/ See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Amy Toensing is a photojournalist and filmmaker committed to telling stories with sensitivity and depth and known for her intimate stories about the lives of ordinary people. Toensing has been a regular contributor to National Geographic magazine for almost two decades. She has photographed cultures around the world including the last cave-dwelling tribe of Papua New Guinea, remote Aboriginal Australia, the Maori of New Zealand, and the Kingdom of Tonga. She has also covered issues such as food insecurity in the United States, the devastation caused by Hurricane Katrina, and Muslim women living in Western culture. She is currently working on her sixteenth feature story for National Geographic magazine. Toensing began her professional career in 1994 as a staff photographer at her New Hampshire hometown paper, The Valley News. She then worked for The New York Times Washington D.C. bureau covering the White House and Capitol Hill during the Clinton administration. In 1998, Toensing left D.C. to obtain her Master’s Degree from Ohio University, School of Visual Communication. Websites Amy Toensing Jason Eskenazi Education Resources: Using Your Life to Launch Your Photography Tokyo: Exploration of the Metropolis 2.0 Momenta Photographic Workshops https://momentaworkshops.com/workshops/ Candid Frame Resources Download the free Candid Frame app for your favorite smart device. Click here to download for . Click here to download Support the work we do at The Candid Frame by contributing to our Patreon effort. You can do this by visiting or visiting the website and clicking on the Patreon button. You can also provide a one-time donation via . You can follow Ibarionex on and .
Lyndall Ryan´s interest in the history of Australia has grown since her early days as a scholar researching the history of Tasmania and the consequences of the "Black War” for the local Aboriginal population. Through her work, the historian became heavily invested in the survival stories of Indigenous Australians and the frontier wars, which included acknowledgment of massacres committed by European settlers in the early days of the nation. Her research and expertise in the field got her involved in the legendary “History Wars” during the 1990s and early 2000s with other historians. In 2017, Lyndall gained worldwide exposure after she and her team at the University of Newcastle in NSW published an interactive online map of massacre sites in Australia. The map went viral and since its first release has turned into a national project in which Australian´s are helping to tell the whole story of the nation's past. Here you can find out more about Lyndall's work and look at the map: https://www.newcastle.edu.au/profile/lyndall-ryan https://c21ch.newcastle.edu.au/colonialmassacres/map.php This Episode of Talking Australia is hosted by Angela Heathcote (Digital Producer at Australian Geographic) and produced by Ben Kanthak (www.beachshackpodcasts.com). See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Lyndall Ryan´s interest in the history of Australia has grown since her early days as a scholar researching the history of Tasmania and the consequences of the "Black War” for the local Aboriginal population. Through her work, the historian became heavily invested in the survival stories of Indigenous Australians and the frontier wars, which included acknowledgment of massacres committed by European settlers in the early days of the nation. Her research and expertise in the field got her involved in the legendary “History Wars” during the 1990s and early 2000s with other historians. In 2017, Lyndall gained worldwide exposure after she and her team at the University of Newcastle in NSW published an interactive online map of massacre sites in Australia. The map went viral and since its first release has turned into a national project in which Australian´s are helping to tell the whole story of the nation’s past. Here you can find out more about Lyndall’s work and look at the map: https://www.newcastle.edu.au/profile/lyndall-ryan https://c21ch.newcastle.edu.au/colonialmassacres/map.php This Episode of Talking Australia is hosted by Angela Heathcote (Digital Producer at Australian Geographic) and produced by Ben Kanthak (www.beachshackpodcasts.com).
Laura Thompson started The Koorie Circle almost five years ago while she was working as a health professional full time, with the aim of making statement earrings that tell a story and celebrate the culture, history and identity of Aboriginal Australia. But with one business chugging along successfully, Laura realised she wanted to do more. So she founded Clothing the Gap, a Victorian Aboriginal owned and led social enterprise. They produce merch with meaning, like t-shirts, jumpers and beanies, and earlier this year, they spearheaded a national campaign to free the flag. In this episode of Lady Startup Stories, Laura chats to Mia Freedman about the challenges of balancing social justice with business, and what happens when a major American company takes you to court. You can visit TheKoorie Circle here - https://thekooriecircle.com.au/. Find Clothing The Gap at https://clothingthegap.com.au/. Find out more about the Lady Startup Idea Kickstarter course here - https://www.ladystartup.com/pages/idea-kickstarter Are you busting to start your own business but you don’t know where to start? Get info about The Lady Startup Activation Plan here... https://www.ladystartup.com/pages/waitlist/ Want insider tips and tricks for your business direct from Mia Freedman each week? Get the free Lady Startup newsletter here... https://www.ladystartup.com.au/ Want to help lift other women higher and maybe get a boost for your biz? Follow us on Instagram… https://www.instagram.com/ladystartups/ Looking for a community of kickass Lady Startups (and other women who want to start businesses)? We have a free one for you right here... https://www.facebook.com/ladystartups/ Need more lols, info and inspo in your ears? Find more Mamamia podcasts here... https://www.mamamia.com.au/podcasts/ Feedback? We’re listening! Call the pod phone on 02 8999 9386 or email us at podcast@mamamia.com.au CREDITS: Host: Mia Freedman, co-founder of Mamamia and founder of Lady Startup Guest: Laura Thompson Producer: Leah Porges See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Content warning: Please be aware that this episode contains descriptions and discussions of discrimination towards queer people, othering, Islamophobia, sex, and religion. If this is a trigger for you, please contact Lifeline (13 11 14), Switchboard Victoria (1800 184 527), or contact your state-based service. Michele Vescio speaks with Niveen Abdelatty, a queer Muslim woman of colour and a politically charged DJ and musician, about her queer history through the lens of intersectionality and disidentification; we also unpack discussions on decolonising information and education in the context of queer history within broad LGBTIQA+ identities and communities. Tracklisting: 'Disjointed' by Candy Royalle, 'A Deeper Love' (Sixty Feet Deep remix) by Aretha Franklin Research resources:Decolonizing Queer Time: A Critique of Anachronism in Latin@ WritingsEveryday Decolonization: Living a Decolonizing Queer PoliticsAgainst State Straightism: Five Principles for Including LGBT IndonesiansQueer and Then?Decolonising and Queering Praxis: The Unanswerable Questions for ‘Queer AsiaThe intersectionality warsYes, we must decolonise: our teaching has to go beyond elite white menAustralia’s queer historyThere is No Hierarchy of OppressionThe art of seeing Aboriginal Australia’s queer potentialA map of gender-diverse culturesA definitive timeline of LGBT+ rights in AustraliaLGBTI Aboriginal people – diversity at the marginsIndigenous Subjectivity in Australia: Are we QueerDecolonising the Queer movement in Australia: we need solidarity, not pink-washing
At 22 years of age, Kokoberra woman Tania Major delivered an amazing speech to conservative Prime Minister John Howard when he visited Cape York in August 2003. She began with the words 'Here I am' and then preceded to describe the situation in her community, using the prism of her 15 classmates, and what has unfolded for them. In this episode, Tania talks about how she came to deliver the speech, and its core policy heart, which related to education, and how more children in remote communities can have a decent chance in life. Tania was named Young Australian of the Year in 2007, was Generation One ambassador in 2010, and is such an accomplished pubic speaker. Her TEDx talk in Melbourne is also part of this episode. You can contact Tania Major to employ her as a speaker, or for information on her consulting services with TMC, relating to cross cultural understanding and indigenous Australia. Episode supported by GreenSkin™ and PurpleSkin™ avocados at http://lovemyavocados.com.au. Please subscribe to the podcast, visit Speakola, and share any great speeches that are special to you, famous or otherwise. I just need transcript & photo /video embed. Speakola also has Twitter and Facebook feeds. Tony Wilson's author website is here. He's on twitter @byTonyWilson. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Ian Morris is a zoologist, educator, conservationist and author that has worked with the traditional owners of Arnhem Land for decades and speaks Djambarrpuyŋu, Warramirri & Gupapuyŋu – all local Indigenous languages. Today, he works as an environmental consultant and teaches children the importance of indigenous science and knowledge. He believes: “If you have the right attitude when you are out in the bush, you are not afraid of what might happen to you but you are fascinated by what's around you.” This Episode of Talking Australia is hosted by Liz Ginis (Managing Editor Digital at Australian Geographic) and produced by Ben Kanthak (www.beachshackpodcasts.com). You can also follow us on Instagram @australiangeographic See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Ian Morris is a zoologist, educator, conservationist and author that has worked with the traditional owners of Arnhem Land for decades and speaks Djambarrpuyŋu, Warramirri & Gupapuyŋu – all local Indigenous languages. Today, he works as an environmental consultant and teaches children the importance of indigenous science and knowledge. He believes: “If you have the right attitude when you are out in the bush, you are not afraid of what might happen to you but you are fascinated by what's around you.” This Episode of Talking Australia is hosted by Liz Ginis (Managing Editor Digital at Australian Geographic) and produced by Ben Kanthak (www.beachshackpodcasts.com). You can also follow us on Instagram @australiangeographic See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Keep on Engaging: #changinglives #keepingculture This webinar, recorded 21 May 2020, provided practical information about engaging with integrity in Aotearoa and, understanding and engaging with Aboriginal and Indigenous culture and community. The panel shared insights and learnings to help break down the barriers to better engage with Aboriginal & Māori communities. Speakers Cain Slater - Kari Foundation - Connecting & Supporting Business and Individuals to be Champions of Change. Cain will be presenting on Understanding and Engaging with Aboriginal and Indigenous culture and community. Cain is also a keynote and inspirational speaker about Indigenous Australia, Employment, Participation and Inclusion to break down the barriers and stereotypes of Aboriginal Australia. He has had a successful career in leadership roles at the National Basketball League, Souths Cares (South Sydney Rabbitohs), National Indigenous Culinary Institute and at the William Angliss Institute of TAFE. Christine Ammunson Christine will be presenting on Engaging with integrity in Aotearoa. From starting out as the Māori Affairs Reporter for the The Evening Post newspaper last millennium, since then Christine's roles have included Press Secretary to the Minister for Pacific Island Affairs, Communications Strategist for the NZ Human Rights Commission, Speechwriter for the Minister of Māori Affairs, Global Lead Strategic Communications for Aurecon and now Director of Promotions and Partnerships for New Zealand's Māori Language Commission. Moderated by Kylie Cochrane: Director - IAP2 Australasia; Chair - IAP2 International and Managing Principal, Communication & Stakeholder Engagement – Australia and New Zealand, Aurecon Please note: In some parts of this recording, the sound quality is a little muffled, due to less than optimal presenter internet connection. We apologise and thank you for your understanding. IAP2 Australasia Leading the national conversation on authentic community and stakeholder engagement. IAP2 Australasia is proud to be recognised as an affiliate of the International Association for Public Participation (IAP2). We are a member association incorporating individuals, governments, institutions and other entities that affect the public interest throughout the world. As a not-for-profit organisation, our aim is to advance the education of the community by teaching and communicating the principles of public participation and how to achieve effective community and stakeholder engagement. Find out more about IAP2 Australasia, including training, membership, events and other resources, visit https://iap2.org.au/
In this second special series of the Game Changers Podcast, Phil talks with Dr Julie Andrews and Leann Wilson about how education might help Australia to address its sad relationship with our First Nations. Dr Julie Andrews is a proud Yorta Yorta and Wurundjeri Woiwurrung descendant who is based in Melbourne. She was born in Mooroopna a small town near Shepparton. Her research and expertise is strongly aligned to her Aboriginal community and heritage, however, she has research interests in mobility, identity, community development and wellbeing along with higher education. Her Yorta Yorta and Melbourne Aboriginal communities are at the centre of her work. Dr Andrews lectures in Aboriginal Studies and is Convenor of Aboriginal Studies at La Trobe University. In this first episode, Phil talks with Julie about family, the importance of story, and confronting the reality of dispossession and resistance in the history of Aboriginal Australia. The Game Changers podcast is produced by Orbital Productions and supported by a School for tomorrow. (aschoolfortomorrow.com) and CIRCLE – The Centre for Innovation, Research, Creativity and Leadership in Education (circle.education). The podcast is hosted on SoundCloud and distributed through Spotify, Google Play, and Apple Podcasts. Please subscribe and tell your friends you like what you are hearing. You can contact us at gamechangers@circle.education, on Twitter and Instagram via @GameChangersPC, and you can also connect with Henry Musoma, Philip SA Cummins and Adriano Di Prato via LinkedIn. Adriano loves his insta and tweets a lot; Phil posts videos to YouTube.
Uncle Fred Deeral as little old man in the film The Message, by Zakpage, to be shown at the National Museum of Australia in April. Nik Lachajczak of Zakpage, Author provided (No reuse)Captain James Cook arrived in the Pacific 250 years ago, triggering British colonisation of the region. We’re asking researchers to reflect on what happened and how it shapes us today. You can see other stories in the series here and an interactive here. Editor’s note: This is an edited transcript of an interview with John Maynard for our podcast Trust Me, I’m An Expert. Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander readers are advised this article contains names of deceased people. There are a multitude of Aboriginal oral memories about Captain James Cook, right across the continent. As the research from Deborah Bird Rose shows, many Aboriginal people in remote locations are certainly under the impression that Cook came there as well, shooting people in a kind of Cook-led invasion of Australia. Many of these communities, of course, never met James Cook; the man never even went there. But the deep impact of James Cook that spread across the country and he came to represent the bogeyman for Aboriginal Australia. Even back in the Protection and Welfare Board days, a government car would turn up and Aboriginal people would be running around screaming, “Lookie, lookie, here comes Cookie!” I wrote about Uncle Ray Rose, sadly recently departed, who’d had a stroke. Someone said, “How do you feel?” And he said, “No good. I’m Captain Cooked.” Cook, wherever he went up the coast, was giving names where names already existed. Yuin oral memory in the south coast of NSW gives the example of what they called Gulaga and Cook called “Mount Dromedary”: […] that name can be seen as the first of the changes that come for our people […] Cook’s maps were very good, but they did not show our names for places. He didn’t ask us. Cook has been incorporated into songs, jokes, stories and Aboriginal oral histories right across the country. Why? I think it’s an Aboriginal response to the way we’ve been taught about our history. Read more: Captain Cook wanted to introduce British justice to Indigenous people. Instead, he became increasingly cruel and violent Myth-making persists but a shift is underway I came through a school system of the 50s and 60s, and we weren’t weren’t even mentioned in the history books except as a people belonging to the Stone Age or as a dying race. It was all about discoverers, explorers, settlers and Phar Lap or Don Bradman. But us Aboriginal people? Not there. We had this high exposure of the public celebration of Cook, the statues of Cook, the reenactments of Cook – it was really in your face. For Aboriginal people, how do we make sense of all of this, faced with the reality of our experience and the catastrophic impact? We’ve got to make sense of it the best way we can, and I think that’s why Cook turns up in so many oral histories. I think wider Australia is moving towards a more balanced understanding of our history. Lots of people now recognise the richest cultural treasure the country possesses is 65,000 years of Aboriginal cultural connection to this continent. That’s unlike anywhere else in the world. I mean no disrespect, but 250 years is a drop in a lake compared to 65,000 years. From our perspective, in fact, we’ve always been here. Our people came out of the Dreamtime of the creative ancestors and lived and kept the Earth as it was in the very first day. With global warming, rising sea levels, rising temperatures and catastrophic storms, Aboriginal people did keep the Earth as it was in the very first day to ensure that it was passed to each surviving generation. There was going to be a (now-cancelled) circumnavigation of Australia in the official proceedings this year, which the prime minister supported. But James Cook didn’t circumnavigate Australia. He only sailed up the east coast. So that’s creating more myths again, which is a senseless way to go. A painting of Captain Cook and the Endeavour journal on display at the National Library of Australia. AAP/ALAN PORRITT ‘With the consent of the Natives to take possession’ Personally, I have high regard for James Cook as a navigator, as a cartographer, and certainly as an inspiring captain of his crew. He encouraged incredible loyalty among those that sailed with him on those three voyages. And that has to be recognised. But against that, of course, is the reality that he was given secret instructions by the Navy to: With the consent of the Natives to take possession of the convenient situations in the country in the name of the king of Great Britain. Well, consent was never given. When they went ashore at Botany Bay, two Aboriginal men brandished spears and made it quite clear they didn’t want him there. Those men were wounded and Cook was one of those firing a musket. There was no gaining any consent when he sailed on to Possession Island and planted that flag down. Totally the opposite, in fact. And the most insightful viewpoint is from Cook himself, who wrote that: all they seem’d to want was for us to be gone. Cook’s background gave him insight James Cook wasn’t your normal British naval officer of that time period. To get into such a position, you normally had to be born into the right family, to come from money and privilege. James Cook was none of those things. He came from a poor family. His father was a labourer. Cook got to where he was by skill, endeavour, and, unquestionably, because he was a very smart man and brilliant at sea. But it’s also from that background that he’s able to offer insight. There’s an incredible quotation of Cook’s where he says of Aboriginal people: They live in a Tranquillity which is not disturb’d by the Inequality of Condition… they live in a warm and fine Climate and enjoy a very wholsome Air. Now, Cook is comparing what he is seeing in Australia with life back Britain, where there is an incredible amount of inequality. London, at the time, was filthy. Sewerage pouring through the streets. Disease was rife. Underprivilege is everywhere. In Australia, though, Cook sees what to him looks like this incredible egalitarian society and it makes an impact on him because of where he comes from. But deeper misunderstandings persisted. In what’s now called Cooktown there are, at first, amicable relationships with the Guugu Yimithirr people, but when they come aboard the Endeavour they see this incredible profusion of turtles that the crew has captured. They’re probably thinking, “these are our turtles.” They would quite happily share some of those turtles but the Bristish response is: you get none. So the Guugu Yimithirr people go off the ship and set the grass on fire. Eventually, there’s a kind of peace settlement but the incident reveals a complete blindness on the part of the British to the idea of reciprocity in Aboriginal society. Read more: 'They are all dead': for Indigenous people, Cook's voyage of 'discovery' was a ghostly visitation A collision of catastrophic proportions The impact of 1770 has never eased for Aboriginal people. It was a collision of catastrophic proportions. The whole impact of 1788 – of invasion, dispossession, cultural destruction, occupation onto assimilation, segregation – all of these things that came after 1770. Anything you want to measure – Aboriginal health, education, employment, housing, youth suicide, incarceration – we have the worst stats. That has been a continuation, a reality of the failure of government to recognise what has happened in the past and actually do something about it in the present to fix it for the future. We’ve had decades and decades of governments saying to us, “We know what’s best for you.” But the fact is that when it comes to Aboriginal well being, the only people to listen to are Aboriginal people and we’ve never been put in the position. We’ve been raising our voices for a long time now, but some people see that as a threat and are not prepared to listen. An honest reckoning of the reality of Cook and what came after won’t heal things overnight. But it’s a starting point, from which we can join hands and walk together toward a shared future. A balanced understanding of the past will help us build a future – it is of critical importance. New to podcasts? Everything you need to know about how to listen to a podcast is here. Additional audio credits Kindergarten by Unkle Ho, from Elefant Traks. Marimba On the Loose by Daniel Birch, from Free Music Archive. Podcast episode recorded and edited by Sunanda Creagh. Lead image Uncle Fred Deeral as little old man in the film The Message, a film by Zakpage, to be shown at the National Museum of Australia in April. Nik Lachajczak of Zakpage.
In this week's segment with Harry Schmitz from Elizabeth's Bookshops he discusses books about Engineering and Aboriginal Australia and the birth of agriculture.
We announce our NEW PATREON BENEFITS on Patreon.com/zodiacbitches. And the reason you're here, the Zodiac Bitches continue to work through Queer Magic by Tomás Prower. We get into Aboriginal Australians, an interesting legend, and our alternative universes.
Ever since I did the Aboriginal Australia episode I wanted to do an episode talking my new home Switzerland. After thinking I decided to do one on the foundations of Switzerland's government and how the various divisions of the country affected its culture and politics today. Apologies if This wasn't exactly about disability rights I just feel it's important to understand a country's culture, history and politics and how that affects its views on people with disabilities today.
Sam Watson was an Aboriginal Australia activist and socialist politician who passed away last year.This is a show in his memory.
The indigenous Australians have marginalised by the European beliefs brought via colonisation. Yet could they be the to creating a more integrated and eco friendly Post Bushfire Crisis Australia?
In her new book Future Histories, author and lawyer Lizzie O'Shea asks what historical social experiments like the Paris Commune can tell us about modern online democracy. “I sort of see Mark Zuckerberg's call for regulation of his platform somewhat cynically,” she says. “I think he's trying to do that in anticipation of it coming inevitably. So, he's going to try and manage that process.” According to the author, this is the moment for us to organise and think about how we can install more democracy into how decisions are made over these platforms. This includes asking questions like what kind of technology should get prioritised and developed? And how do we allocate those resources rather than just leaving it to private companies to do themselves? “I guess this is a conceptual framework that I've sourced from indigenous ways of knowing and governing. I looked to places like Aboriginal Australia, New Zealand prior to colonisation, and also in North America, in Canada,” says Ms O'Shea. “So looking to those societies as peoples who have collectively managed resources for a long time, often in hostile environments, and that we might have something to learn from them in terms of managing the environment that we live in online in ways that prioritise respect and common humanity rather than money-making and exploitation.” Episode recorded: August 23, 2019. Interviewer: Silvi Vann-Wall. Producer, audio engineer and editor: Chris Hatzis. Co-production: Silvi Vann-Wall and Dr Andi Horvath. Image: Shutterstock.
In her new book Future Histories, author and lawyer Lizzie O’Shea asks what historical social experiments like the Paris Commune can tell us about modern online democracy. “I sort of see Mark Zuckerberg’s call for regulation of his platform somewhat cynically,” she says. “I think he’s trying to do that in anticipation of it coming inevitably. So, he’s going to try and manage that process.” According to the author, this is the moment for us to organise and think about how we can install more democracy into how decisions are made over these platforms. This includes asking questions like what kind of technology should get prioritised and developed? And how do we allocate those resources rather than just leaving it to private companies to do themselves? “I guess this is a conceptual framework that I’ve sourced from indigenous ways of knowing and governing. I looked to places like Aboriginal Australia, New Zealand prior to colonisation, and also in North America, in Canada,” says Ms O’Shea. “So looking to those societies as peoples who have collectively managed resources for a long time, often in hostile environments, and that we might have something to learn from them in terms of managing the environment that we live in online in ways that prioritise respect and common humanity rather than money-making and exploitation.” Episode recorded: August 23, 2019. Interviewer: Silvi Vann-Wall. Producer, audio engineer and editor: Chris Hatzis. Co-production: Silvi Vann-Wall and Dr Andi Horvath. Image: Shutterstock.
James and his family established the Cygnet Bay Pearl farm on the Dampier Peninsula and through this multigenerational endeavour they have developed strong personal and working relationships with the indigenous Bardi people. It is a unique place to bring up kids where the country itself does much of the teaching. Topics discussed. Straight to the discipline debate We are both children of the 70's Parenting has changed- expectations have changed. Even in the most remote town on earth, phones and social media are a concern. John Marsden and the realities of childhood development. Parenting mentors. The struggle to look after your relationship and mental health. Biology wants us to breed- that's all. Oxytocin addicts. When having kids is hard to do. The bush raises the kids. Growing up with Aboriginal people. Holding back the smart phone Tsunami. Teach resilience Boys will find someone to follow. Find some bush to release your kids into. All non-indigenous people should spend time with Aboriginal people and take the time to listen and learn. White Australia has no idea about what Aboriginal Australia needs. Long term relationships for reconciliation. Bardi kids going through lore- Non-indigenous kids being invited to go through the process too. A brief history of the Brown Family Pearling business on the Dampier Peninsula. Managing the fear for your kid's future- what if they do the things we did? And more!! Trying to appreciate the good things about being a parent. Can we be fearless parents?
James and his family established the Cygnet Bay Pearl farm on the Dampier Peninsula and through this multigenerational endeavour they have developed strong personal and working relationships with the indigenous Bardi people. It is a unique place to bring up kids where the country itself does much of the teaching. Topics discussed. Straight to the discipline debate We are both children of the 70’s Parenting has changed- expectations have changed. Even in the most remote town on earth, phones and social media are a concern. John Marsden and the realities of childhood development. Parenting mentors. The struggle to look after your relationship and mental health. Biology wants us to breed- that’s all. Oxytocin addicts. When having kids is hard to do. The bush raises the kids. Growing up with Aboriginal people. Holding back the smart phone Tsunami. Teach resilience Boys will find someone to follow. Find some bush to release your kids into. All non-indigenous people should spend time with Aboriginal people and take the time to listen and learn. White Australia has no idea about what Aboriginal Australia needs. Long term relationships for reconciliation. Bardi kids going through lore- Non-indigenous kids being invited to go through the process too. A brief history of the Brown Family Pearling business on the Dampier Peninsula. Managing the fear for your kid’s future- what if they do the things we did? And more!! Trying to appreciate the good things about being a parent. Can we be fearless parents?
WARNING: Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander listeners are warned that this episode may contain stories and names of deceased persons. Lyndall Ryan´s interest in the history of Australia has grown since her early days as a scholar researching the history of Tasmania and the consequences of the "Black War” for the local Aboriginal people. Through her work, the historian became heavily invested in the survival stories of Indigenous Australians and the frontier wars, which included acknowledgment of massacres in the early days of the nation. Her research and expertise in the field got her involved in the legendary “History Wars” during the 1990s and early 2000s with other historians. In 2017, Lyndall gained worldwide exposure after she and her team at the University of Newcastle in NSW published an interactive online map of massacre sites in Australia. The map went viral and since its first release has turned into a national project in which Australian´s are helping to tell the whole story of the nation's past. Here you can find out more about Lyndall's work and look at the map: https://www.newcastle.edu.au/profile/lyndall-ryan https://c21ch.newcastle.edu.au/colonialmassacres/map.php This Episode of Talking Australia is hosted by Angela Heathcote (Digital Producer at Australian Geographic) and produced by Ben Kanthak (www.beachshackpodcasts.com). You can also follow us on Instagram @australiangeographic. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
WARNING: Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander listeners are warned that this episode may contain stories and names of deceased persons. Lyndall Ryan´s interest in the history of Australia has grown since her early days as a scholar researching the history of Tasmania and the consequences of the "Black War” for the local Aboriginal people. Through her work, the historian became heavily invested in the survival stories of Indigenous Australians and the frontier wars, which included acknowledgment of massacres in the early days of the nation. Her research and expertise in the field got her involved in the legendary “History Wars” during the 1990s and early 2000s with other historians. In 2017, Lyndall gained worldwide exposure after she and her team at the University of Newcastle in NSW published an interactive online map of massacre sites in Australia. The map went viral and since its first release has turned into a national project in which Australian´s are helping to tell the whole story of the nation’s past. Here you can find out more about Lyndall’s work and look at the map: https://www.newcastle.edu.au/profile/lyndall-ryan https://c21ch.newcastle.edu.au/colonialmassacres/map.php This Episode of Talking Australia is hosted by Angela Heathcote (Digital Producer at Australian Geographic) and produced by Ben Kanthak (www.beachshackpodcasts.com). You can also follow us on Instagram @australiangeographic.
------------------Support the channel------------ Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/thedissenter SubscribeStar: https://www.subscribestar.com/the-dissenter PayPal: paypal.me/thedissenter PayPal Subscription 1 Dollar: https://tinyurl.com/yb3acuuy PayPal Subscription 3 Dollars: https://tinyurl.com/ybn6bg9l PayPal Subscription 5 Dollars: https://tinyurl.com/ycmr9gpz PayPal Subscription 10 Dollars: https://tinyurl.com/y9r3fc9m PayPal Subscription 20 Dollars: https://tinyurl.com/y95uvkao ------------------Follow me on--------------------- Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/thedissenteryt/ Twitter: https://twitter.com/TheDissenterYT Dr. Ian Gilligan is Honorary Associate Professor in the Department of Archaeology of the University of Sydney. He graduated in psychology (UNSW) and medicine (Sydney University) before studying prehistoric archaeology (Sydney University) and biological anthropology (PhD ANU). He specializes in the origin of clothing and the role of textiles in the transition to agriculture. He also has an interest in traditional clothing in Aboriginal Australia, particularly in Tasmania during the last ice age. In addition, he explores the wider psychological and philosophical aspects of wearing clothes. He's also the author of the recent book Climate, Clothing, and Agriculture in Prehistory: Linking Evidence, Causes, and Effects (2018). In this episode, we talk about the evolution of clothing and the adoption of agriculture in human societies. First, we talk about hypotheses as to how our naked skin might have evolved, and when in our evolutionary history we started wearing clothes and the environmental factors that favored its development. We also briefly refer to the limitations in terms of the information we can derive from studies on modern hunter-gatherers, if we're trying to learn more about how our species evolved and how people behaved back in the Pleistocene. We go through the differences between simples and complex clothing (the latter includes textile clothing), and also between clothing based on animal skin and fur and clothing based on textiles. Then, we discuss the ways by which clothing might have played a causal role in the adoption of agriculture and making it the center of our economy, the problems that early agricultural societies went through, and also why we domesticated animals. We finish off by talking about the psychological and social aspects of clothing, including decoration. Time Links: 00:56 The evolution of our naked skin 07:56 When did we start wearing clothes? 10:47 Artifacts archaeologists search for when studying clothing 15:09 The environmental factors that favor the development of clothing 17:22 Studying modern hunter-gatherers 24:52 We decorated our skin before we had clothing 28:37 Simple, complex and textile clothing 32:20 The differences between clothing based on animal skin and fur and clothing based on textiles 33:44 The relationship between clothing and agriculture 38:12 Agriculture before societies that put agriculture at the center of their food economy 42:37 The problems the agricultural societies have to deal with 48:20 The reasons why we domesticated
We start the show off with our Jawbone segment, hosted by Jake Clark, interviewing Selina Crammond on the Podcast Festival coming to Vancouver. We, also, talk about some of our favorite spooky podcasts for viewers to check out. We then go in depth with organizer Carol E. Mayer about the new exhibition coming to the Museum of Anthropology, "Marking the Infinite: Contemporary Women Artists from Aboriginal Australia". Our end is, of course, about Halloween with talks about Pokemon costumes and a Masquerade Party to check out!
Did you know that wellbeing has sustained Aboriginal Australians to be one of the world’s oldest continuing living cultures for more than 80,000 years?It’s an honour for this podcast series to be introduced with a conversation with Jamie Marloo Thomas, a proud Aboriginal Australian and the co-founder of Wayapa - the first formalized wellness and connection practice based on Indigenous Australian knowledge.Wayapa is also known as Wayapa Wurrk, which means connect to country. It focuses on taking care of the Earth as a starting point for healing ourselves. It’s a physical practice and an earth meditation, that has been likened to eastern practices such as yoga and tai chi.In this episode you'll discover tips on how you can introduce ancient Aboriginal Australian practices into your own life to reconnect to earth.
Contender # 9 - Bunyip This time, on Counting Cryptids: We discuss the Bunyip. Straight out of Aboriginal Australia, the Bunyip is a smorgasbord of strange. Reports of fur and feathers, fins and claws, a beard and a duck bill (and if that wasn't strange enough, a single massive eye, and a stomach-mouth). While descriptions of the Bunyip seem to paint this creature to be something of a sore thumb, modern day sightings may not be as predictable as one would expect. Do you think there something sinister swimming in the swamps? Or could something have simply been lost in translation? AKA The Thing-a From Down Und-a Links: Main Image Single Eye / Stomach Mouth Scribblenauts Bunyip Elephant Seal Southern Cassowary (it's legs look reptilian to me) Diprotodon Zygomaturus Palorchestes The Challicum Bunyip Skull Tasmanian Tiger Elephant Skull Social:Be sure to follow us on social media to answer this week's poll, and to stay connected!Click here to visit our Facebook pageClick here to follow us on Twitter Click here to subscribe on SpotifyMake sure you subscribe and rate our podcast! Intro quote: The Geelong Advertiser, July 1845
Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples have historically been subject to much more misdiagnosis, mistreatment, incarceration and coercion than other Australians in the hands of psychiatric institutions, psychiatrists and other mental health professionals. The ramifications of psychiatry’s sometimes unwitting, indifferent or knowing complicity in past harmful practices and beliefs have been far-reaching. They extend from the health and well-being of the individual patient, to human rights and social justice concerns that prevail in contemporary Australian society. How do we come to grips with the past, and how do we do so in just ways? What are the responsibilities of psychiatry to ensure a contribution to improving Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander social and emotional health and well-being? What can apology and other forms of recognition achieve? What can we learn from other projects of apology and recognition? A panel discussion held as part of Sydney Ideas on 7 March 2018: https://sydney.edu.au/news-opinion/sydney-ideas/2018/working-the-past-aboriginal-australia-and-psychiatry.html
Commemorating the growing global significance of United Nations Interfaith Harmony Week, Unity Earth-sponsored U DAY Festival: Ethiopia, Convergence of Fires in the Land of Origins, brings together global spiritual and religious leaders, international change-makers and world-class musical artists. We gather Jan. 31- Febr. 7, with an online event for global participation Febr. 3: http://udayfestival.org/ethiopia-2018/ Supporting this vision, representatives from Aboriginal Australia, North and Central American indigenous leaders, Sikhs, Bahai, Sufis, Buddhists, and Hindus from India, and Thai Buddhists along with Jews, Christians, and Muslims gather to celebrate a colorful and diverse community. Ceremonies will join the themes of Unity, Peace and Compassion. On this radio special, Unity Earth's UDAY Executive Director Ben Bowler hosts event notables David Gershon, Jon Ramer, David Nicol, Claudia Welss, Deborah Moldow and Kristin Hoffmann, each further highlighted below.
The Respect Campaign. We look at perspectives on the campaign to bring Aboriginal Australia under the control of the Australian Constitution: has the Australian non-indignous community done enough to be able to make a fair deal with Aboriginal people. We speak with filmmaker Melanie Hogan about her film Kanyini made ten years ago and about to be re-released on iTunes (June 28) which is about the issues for Aboriginal people when it comes to moving forward in harmony in this country. We follow this with a powerful speech by Uncle Les Coe a Dubbo man who left the recent Uhluru meeting. He gives his reasons.We move on to This is the Week that was.Then Humphrey McQueen gives a fablous account of the six mainstream critques of Marxism and gives his score.
In the last 50 years museums have slowly changed from exhibitions ‘about’ Indigenous peoples to exhibitions by Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander curators. As the University of Sydney embarks on the building of the new Chau Chak Wing Museum, we consider what are the next steps and continue to question how exhibitions of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander collections can engage all visitors meaningfully. Speakers: Sharni Jones, Manager of the Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander collections at the Australian Museum Stephen Gilchrist, Associate Lecturer Department of Art History, University of Sydney Rodney Kelly, Gweagal activist for the repatriation of ancestral collections to Aboriginal ownership Amanda Reynolds, Stella Stories artist, curator, cultural consultant and editor Matt Poll, (panel chair) Assistant Curator, Indigenous Heritage, Macleay Museum, Sydney University Museums A 2017 Reconciliation Week at the University of Sydney event, co-presented with the Macleay Museum. Held on 31 May 2017: http://sydney.edu.au/sydney_ideas/lectures/2017/reconciliation_week_arts_aboriginal_australia_forum.shtml
Happiness! Anyone who listens to Hot & Delicious: Rocks The Planet! on Bondi Beach Radio and the iTunes podcast every week, will know that I am a massive fan and believer in chasing your dreams in the pursuit of happiness. This week I am excited to have award-winning Australian comedian, podcaster & writer, Tom Ballard on Hot & Delicious: Rocks The Planet! to promote his 2017 stand-up show ‘Problematic’ that’s LIVE at Giant Dwarf this Thursday - Sunday as part of Sydney Comedy Festival. Over the past 2 years since our last recording together, Tom’s stand-up comedy career has been on a sharp rise to the top, enjoying nominations for Best Show at both Melbourne International Comedy Festival and the Edinburgh Fringe Festival in 2016, his American television debut on Comedy Central’s Roast Battle at Montreal’s Just for Laughs Festival, his political podcast Like I’m A Six-Year-Old has just hit 100 episodes and continues to grow from strength to strength and at the end of 2016 he appeared in SBS’s ground-breaking series First Contact, a journey of discovery into Aboriginal Australia. One of the joys that I have discovered that comes as a result of surrounding yourself with like-minded people also pursuing their own ambition and success, is that invariably you get to watch your friends rise to the challenge, share their journeys and celebrate your collective wins along the way. Tom Ballard was certainly already well on his way to this success we first met 6 years ago, whilst launching triple j unearthed as a radio station back in 2011, but to then watch him have the courage to leave his role has co-host of the Tom & Alex morning show on triple j, take a leap of faith to achieve his dream of being a successful stand-up comedian and see where he’s at now just makes me so happy! "Being your own master of your life and your passions, it’s a very powerful and important thing to do and if you have a chance to take it then grab it with both hands.” - Tom Ballard. Never a truer word spoken, my man. Let’s get into the show! Buy tickets to Tom Ballard’s stand up show ‘Problematic’ at Sydney Comedy Festival (Thursday May 4th - Sunday May 7th) today! http://www.sydneycomedyfest.com.au/single-event?show_id=1707 Connect with Tom Ballard online: http://tomballard.com.au/ https://twitter.com/TomCBallard https://www.facebook.com/tomballardaustralia/ Download the 'Like I’m A Six-Year-Old' political podcast with Tom Ballard: https://itunes.apple.com/au/podcast/like-im-a-six-year-old/id959362738?mt=2 Tom Ballard - 2017 Opening Night Comedy Allstars Supershow https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cKAkSYmsARw Watch SBS -First Contact: http://www.sbs.com.au/programs/first-contact Hit Hot & Delicious: Rocks The Planet up on social media here: Twitter https://twitter.com/hotndelicious Instagram https://www.instagram.com/hotndelicious/ Instagram https://www.instagram.com/craftbeerlovin/ Facebook https://www.facebook.com/HotnDelicious Hot & Delicious YouTube - Ballistyx Snowboard Show, interviews & more. https://www.youtube.com/user/HotnDeliciousRecords 'Hot & Delicious: Rocks The Planet’ entertainment, travel, photography & lifestyle blog: http://hotndelicious.com/ For social media, photography & influencer business enquiries contact: info@hotndelicious.com
A Sydney-based yoga organisation is fusing Indian and Indigenous yoga traditions, incorporating the spirit of Aboriginal Australia into the ancient practice. - A Sydney-based yoga organisation is fusing Indian and Indigenous yoga traditions, incorporating the spirit of Aboriginal Australia into the ancient practice.
A Sydney based yoga organisation is fusing Indian and Indigenous yoga traditions, incorporating the spirit of Aboriginal Australia into the ancient practice. - ಸಿಡ್ನಿಯ ಒಂದು ಯೋಗ ಸಂಸ್ಥೆ, ಭಾರತೀಯ ಹಾಗೂ ಮೂಲನಿವಾಸಿಗಳ ಯೋಗ ಬೆಸೆದು, ಆಸ್ಟ್ರೇಲಿಯಾ ಮೂಲನಿವಾಸಿಗಳ ಹೊಸ ಚೈತನ್ಯವನ್ನು ಪ್ರಾಚೀನ ಯೋಗಾಭ್ಯಾಸದೊಡನೆ ಸಂಯೋಜಿಸುತ್ತಿದೆ.
Weand're talking to the Author of and'One Bloodand' about the history of Christian missions in Aboriginal Australia, with fascinating insights into the reconciliation process and the checkered history of the treatment of Aboriginal peoples. Help Vision to keep 'Connecting Faith to Life': https://vision.org.au/donate See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Do the languages we speak shape the way we think? For example, how do we think about time? The word "time" is the most frequent noun in the English language. Time is ubiquitous yet ephemeral. It forms the very fabric of our experience, and yet it is unperceivable: we cannot see, touch, or smell time. How do our minds create this fundamental aspect of experience? Do patterns in language and culture influence how we think about time? Do languages merely express thoughts, or do the structures in languages (without our knowledge or consent) shape the very thoughts we wish to express? Can learning new ways to talk change how you think? Is there intrinsic value in human linguistic diversity? Join us as Stanford cognitive scientist Lera Boroditsky re-invigorates this long standing debate with data from experiments done around the world, from China, to Indonesia, Israel, and Aboriginal Australia.
John Harris, author of 'One Blood', discusses 200 years of Aboriginal contact with Christianity. Is it true that the impact of Christian missions was all bad? What have been the lasting impacts? Where does hope lie in this story?
This month Kate Grenville talks about her best-selling novel The Secret River. Her first work for five years since she won the Orange Prize, The Secret River was shortlisted for the Man Booker Prize soon after publication. Set in 1806 and based on the true story of Kate’s first Australian ancestor, this is a dramatic and evocative historical novel set between the slums of nineteenth-century London and the convict colonies of Australia. Told through the eyes of William Thornhill and his family The Secret River examines the timeless themes of ownership, belonging and identity against a backdrop of Aboriginal Australia. Book list: Title: The Secret River Author: Kate Grenville Publisher: Canongate Books ISBN-13: 978-1841956824 If you'd like to take part in a future World Book Club, here's your chance. Lionel Shriver will be discussing his bestselling novel We Need to Talk Kevin on Tuesday 12th May 2009. Please submit your question for Lionel Shriver in the comment section on the form below or ring us on (+44) 207 5571619.
The first season of 'First Contact' sparked debate across the country when 6 Australians ventured into Aboriginal Australia for the first time. Logie award winning series is coming back for a second season, but this time, journalist Ray Martin will take on the journey six Australian celebrities with very conflicting opinions about our nations's indigenous peoples - 'ಫಸ್ಟ್ ಕಾಂಟಾಕ್ಟ್' ಸಾಕ್ಷ್ಯ ಚಿತ್ರದ ಮೊದಲ ವರ್ಷದ ಪ್ರದರ್ಶನದಲ್ಲಿ, ಆರು ಜನ ಆಸ್ಟ್ರೇಲಿಯನ್ನರು ಮೊದಲ ಬಾರಿಗೆ ಆದಿವಾಸಿ ಆಸ್ಟ್ರೇಲಿಯಾಕ್ಕೆ ಕಾಲಿಟ್ಟಾಗ ದೇಶಾದ್ಯಂತ ಚರ್ಚೆಗೆ ದಾರಿ ಮಾಡಿಕೊಟ್ಟಿತ್ತು. ಲೋಗಿ ಪ್ರಶಸ್ತಿ ವಿಜೇತ ಮಾಲಿಕೆಯು, ಎರಡನೇ ವರ್ಷದ ಪ್ರದರ್ಶನಕ್ಕಾಗಿ ಮರಳಿ ಬರಲಿದೆ. ಆದರೆ ಈ ಬಾರಿ, ಪತ್ರಕರ್ತ ರೇ ಮಾರ್ಟಿನ್ ತಮ್ಮ ಜತೆಯಲ್ಲಿ ದೇಶದ ಸ್ಥಳಜನ್ಯ ಜನರ ಬಗ್ಗೆ ತೀರಾ ವ್ಯತಿರಿಕ್ತವಾದ ಅಭಿಪ್ರಾಯ ಹೊಂದಿರುವ ೬ ಜನ ಖ್ಯಾತ ವ್ಯಕ್ತಿಗಳನ್ನು ಕರೆದೊಯ್ಯುತ್ತಿದ್ದಾರೆ.
The first season of First Contact sparked debate across the country when six Australians ventured into Aboriginal Australia for the first time. - Az SBS új sorozatának, a First Contact, Első találkozás első évadja országszerte vitákat kavart. A Logie-díjas tévésorozat második része nemsokára indul.