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"Fashion is not just clothing or what you wear, it's a form of contemporary storytelling,” said Kaantju woman and NGV art curator Shonae Hobson.
Bruce Pascoe on Understanding Australia's Indigenous Past (and Why It Matters to Our Future).
How are schools providing students and their teachers with the knowledge to understand Australia's Indigenous past, present and future? Plus, what's it like to come face-to-face with your teenage self on Facebook? And are 'body clocks' real?
Do you sing the national anthem with pride? Have you thought about the foreign flag in the corner of our own? In this episode, Prouty and Josh discuss the National Anthem, the Australian Flag, and ask whether or not these symbols adequately acknowledge Australia's Indigenous past.
For cultural sensitivity, our Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander listeners are advised that this podcast contains conversations about people who are deceased.Trigger warning: This episode discusses suicide. If you or someone you know is experiencing suicidal thoughts please phone Lifeline from anywhere in Australia on 13 11 14.In today’s episode, Annie and Bianka look at Australia’s drinking culture and the way alcohol is advertised to us. They discuss the ways that alcohol seeps into our subconscious mind through marketing and pop culture. This episode also looks at the ways Aboriginals have been affected by alcohol. Big thanks to our first guest today, Lauren Zonfrillo, the founder of award-winning marketing and communications agency, Pulse. Lauren is also the board director of the Orana Foundation which has a mission to shine a light on Australia's Indigenous food - so please check that out!You can also find Lauren at @laurenzonfrillo on Instagram and Twitter. And secondly you heard from Tarneen Onus Williams. Tarneen is a very active leader and writer in the Aboriginal community so you're almost certain to seem them again but make sure you follow them on Twitter at @Tarneen to keep up to date.Do you have a topic you think we should cover? Do you need advice on something? Well drop us a line! You can write to us directly through our website https://annieandbianka.com.au/ - you can also check out info on any upcoming events.Follow us on Instagram https://www.instagram.com/wewanttobebetter/Come and play with us in our online community and connect with other listeners at https://www.facebook.com/groups/476216616221980/
Trace talks to Courtney about indigenous culture, dispels the misconceptions, discuss the difficult realities & talks about, Australian sport, Australian cricket and the strides they are making for inclusion & diversity. They talk, controversy, they talk women in sport, the closing pay gap & so much more. An interesting discussion indeed!
Premier Bob McLeod tells Ollie he believes union activists carried out "illegal job action" in confronting him at a constituency meeting. Also today: Canada learns about land protection from Australia's Indigenous experts, and a chronic disease the Dene Nation fears could decimate the NWT's caribou.
For this episode, we discuss the Fake Art Harms Culture campaign. The Fake Art campaign is being run by Arts Law, the Indigenous Art Code and Copyright Agency, to introduce policy to protect Indigenous artists against Fake Art being made and sold in Australia. We speak with Gabrielle O'Sullivan, BiBi Barber and Judy Grady about why this campaign is so important and how artists and arts workers can get involved with the current Parliamentary Inquiry. The Fake Art campaign suggests over 80% of Aboriginal products sold in Australia are not authentic – meaning they are not made by or credited to Australia's Indigenous peoples. It is important that Aboriginal and Torres Strait islander people’s rights are protected and this means stopping the fake art and holding companies, individuals and dealers to more transparent and ethical processes. The campaign is encouraging artists to make a submission to the enquiry, for more information go to www.aph.gov.au/inauthenticart This discussion was part of the NAVA Book Club, held during Artspace’s Volume Another Art Book Fair 2017. Stay tuned for the next podcast from this event that will discuss Indigenous protocols and policies and critical methodologies.
Shireen Morris is the Constitutional Reform Advisor at Noel Pearson's Cape York Institute. In the wake of the 50th anniversary of the 1967 Referendum and the Uluru Statement From The Heart, Shireen runs me through the history of constitutional recognition, what it means and how it might work moving forward. We cover symbolism, the political reaction to the Statement, what an Aboriginal Voice might look like, treaty and the tension between Indigenous land rights and environmental considerations. I learnt a whole lot here because Shireen is fully heaps smart. Problematic is coming to Edinburgh Fringe 2017 Comedy For Good at Howler on Thursday June 22nd, raising $$ for Refugee Legal My appearance on Stuart Goldsmith's podcast The Comedian's Comedian Season 2 of First Contact is back up on SBS On Demand @ShireenMorrisMs Shireen on Facebook Shireen sparring with Andrew Bolt on the ABC's Yes or No? Article: No Australian should feel like a stranger in their own country Article: A job half done by Noel Pearson upholdandrecognise.com RightWrongs: the ABC's site on the 1967 Referendum Uluru proposals deserve better than a knee-jerk reaction by Fred Chaney Explainer: All the questions you were too afraid to ask about Indigenous constitutional recognition Article: Why New Zealand's Maori got a treaty and Australia's Indigenous peoples didn't Cause of the Week: 1 Voice Uluru (1voiceuluru.org)
Australia's Indigenous people dealt with the white ghosts from across the sea in different ways. Bennelong pursued a path of accommodation and was the first Indigenous man to visit England, whilst the warrior Pemulwuy, dressed in his Amazing Technicolor Dreamingcoat, fought a bloody 12-year guerrilla war.