Monday, December 20, 2010

2010 - Wrapping up the Year


The Last Week. A pleasant time of the year, meetings now tend to be about opening up possibilities rather than sorting out problems or getting my hair dried. With the support of a major peak body in the not-for-profit sector and colleagues in the Graduate School of Education we intend to develop a proposal for a Masters by Course Work degree, and we've commenced planning. I attended a useful University of Melbourne colloquium on Graduate Attributes - a lot of useful experience shared with colleagues and we've already started to factor this into our thinking.


Bronwyn Jane Adams Memorial Award.
Johanna Simmons was successful in her application for a Bronwyn Jane Adams Memorial Award:

‘Johanna will undertake a comparative study of two programs demonstrating leadership and best practice in teaching Indigenous studies in Australia and New Zealand. The study will include curriculum inventories, exploration of the two programs’ pedagogy rationales and overarching philosophies and a quantitative study of student numbers. Her visit will contribute to inter-university relationships that could lead to an international academic consortium and specialised exchange programs for students undertaking Indigenous studies.’


Blair's Insights. I know people get angry at the content of Tony Blair's Tony Blair: A Journey but it's artful, intelligent, and often funny. From a literary perspective it's one of those self-exculpatory narratives without the naivety of most of them. There's plenty to be learned from it. Versions of the battle between New Labour and Old Labour are played out in many domains, including Aboriginal affairs.


Interdisciplinary Foundation Subjects.
Once more our subject Australian Indigenous Studies topped the quality of teaching evaluations for these subjects. Our tutoring team led by Alicia Coram did a fantastic job. Several students commented on the fact that tutors made the tutorials a place for respectful and open discussion. With 360 students it’s probably the largest non-compulsory Australian Indigenous Studies subject in Australia. The fact that it’s at the University of Melbourne which has never had anything remotely comparable makes it all the more remarkable. The subject introduces students to different aspects of Indigenous Australia – some are inspired to go on and do our Indigenous Studies major. Changes to the current structure for Interdisciplinary Foundation subjects are planned next year and our primary concern will be to ensure that those changes do not detract from our achievements. Our 2nd and 3rd year subjects were very well received by students this semester as well. I really hope that we are developing an identifiable University of Melbourne Indigenous studies culture.


Happy Christmas. The Year of the Tiger has at times been tempestuous. We're happy to have survived and grateful for what we have. We’ll leave you with this song that featured in
Four Lions. Even the suicide bombers were singing it.



Saturday, December 11, 2010

Anthony Mundine

Whether he admits it or not, it’s the end of the road (or at least the boxing road) for Anthony ‘The Man’ Mundine. He may fight on, and win a few more fights, but on the evidence, his reflexes are shot and his strength and durability minimal. It’s been quite a journey since he walked away from a rugby league career in 2000. A magnetic presence, The Man was a source of pride to many Koories and his individualism and personal style an attractive alternative to the conformism and uncouthness of some sports people. Unfortunately the expectations some of us had of him as a leader were probably unrealistic. There were moments however when anything seemed possible.

Anthony achieved far more than most could have foreseen as a fighter and is one of a very small group of athletes who’ve performed at an elite level in two distinct sports. The problem was the better he became as a fighter the greater the expectation that he would fight major names in the sport but once he was established he preferred low risk fights in Australia. After each win there was always talk about taking on the best. It never happened and when a head-butting novice finally knocked him out it no longer mattered.

As well as the highlights Anthony also provided a few lowlights - the fight with Lester Ellis (Ellis was an alcoholic at the time) and the fight with Danny Green - with both men engaging in coded race-baiting.

The stand The Man took against racism in rugby league was courageous and the viral response an indication of how insecure a lot of Settler Australians are when challenged by Aboriginals. Unfortunately he undermined any chance to build on this. His comments on race sometimes seemed to coincide with the publicity demands of his fights and ten years after leaving rugby league it's hard to say if his understanding of issues affecting Aboriginal Australia is any more developed. This all sounds pretty tough but I believe it's the result of trying to balance his contradictory roles as fighter, promoter, and Aboriginal leader. Once The Man is out of boxing we'll see his full potential.

Friday, December 3, 2010

Winter's Bone, Age and Youth

Winter’s Bone. Now on general release, I saw this at the Melbourne International Film Festival. I’d just seen a few blockbusters so at first it seemed amazingly low-tech and needy in its demanding of sustained attention. The film works with a subtle narrative so it won’t appeal to everyone but it effectively sketches out the lives of a group of Ozark mountain people. What struck me was the eros of their attachment to the animals they hunted for food and those they kept a pets. For some Murri rural workers this eros was a transmutation in a post-colonial setting of the original relationship with land and creation. I count myself fortunate in that I’m part of a minority who were actually connected to people who embodied it. Some of the women in Winter’s Bone looked like they had Native American ancestry as well, so I wasn’t completely surprised to read an interview with the director in which she talked of the importance of animals to the Ozark community she worked with and the Native American connection.

Jindalee Lady. Thanks to Jane Brown, School of Culture and Communication Library Manager, for arranging a screening of this film at the Australian Centre for the Moving Image. We never quite untangled the riddle of why this film is almost impossible to see. Johanna, Jane and I watched it, and a consensus opinion was that though Brian Syron’s film may be naïve in its cinematic technique, and some of its representations, there is nothing naïve in its emotional power. The film is a tribute to Aboriginal women centred on conception and the mother-child connection. Lydia Miller amps up the intensity with an outstanding performance.


Age and Hypocrisy. We’d received emails from a Settler woman from another university who’d received some grant and was inviting people to a workshop. (The workshop included the usual genuflections to Indigenous people.) It looked like it could be relevant to our program but on the day of the workshop we couldn’t attend because it clashed with our School planning day. As a compromise I arranged for a 20 year old high-achieving Aboriginal undergraduate (who does some work for me as a research assistant) to attend as an observer. The intention was for AIS academics to attend further meetings. The woman who had been emailing us was notified by email that this would happen. On the day of the meeting there was torrential rain and despite having a bad cold the research assistant put on a shirt with a collar and leather shoes and headed off to the workshop. On arriving at the room where the workshop was supposed to be he was confronted by a middle-aged Settler woman whose opening gambit was, ‘Who are you?’ and who then dismissed him with the words, ‘I think you’ve come to the wrong place.’ If he’d only confirmed that woman’s name I’d be doing a lot more with this but that’s where mentoring comes in.

Age and Marginality. A post-graduate student of mine (in his early twenties) presenting a paper at one of those off-campus/para-university events was subject to an unchecked half hour of blather and personal attack by an ‘independent scholar’. I’m not blind to the imperfections of sandstone universities and the University of Melbourne but I sincerely believe that this couldn’t have happened if it had been held at the University of Melbourne. In fact I was surprised the other week when attending a contentious paper presented by a visiting scholar on Indigenous issues, at the fairness and courtesy of the critique by University of Melbourne scholars.

Incidents like these and our continued response to them are the substratum necessary for the advancement of Australian Indigenous Studies.

Volunteering. If you know a student or recent graduate who is interested in volunteering Youth Challenge Australia is worth considering. More on these opportunities next year.

http://www.youthchallenge.org.au/