Inhabiting Silence: A Sorry Story
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.36510/learnland.v2i1.286Keywords:
aboriginal, visual arts, collective biography, deconstructive, white teacher, silence, narrative logic, metonymy, symbolismAbstract
This paper describes how works created in a visual arts workshop enable the author to work obliquely with stories about teaching Aboriginal children generated in a collective biography. The deconstructive work is framed by Prime Minister Rudd’s 2008 "sorry" speech to Aboriginal Australians and Mazzei’s work on silence with white teachers. The visual arts methodology allows a shift from narrative logic and literal detail to metonymy and symbolism while the materiality of artefacts and art equipment invite particular representations and interpretations to emerge.
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Published
2008-02-01
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Articles
How to Cite
Inhabiting Silence: A Sorry Story. (2008). LEARNing Landscapes, 2(1), 235-244. https://doi.org/10.36510/learnland.v2i1.286