TY - BOOK AU - Holland,Alison TI - Breaking the silence: aboriginal defenders and the Settler State, 1905--1939 SN - 9780522875416 AV - DU124.S63 U1 - 305.89915 23 PY - 2019/// CY - Victoria PB - Melbourne University Publishing KW - Aboriginal Australians KW - Social conditions KW - 20th century KW - Social life and customs KW - Australiens (Aborigènes) KW - Mœurs et coutumes KW - 20e siècle KW - fast KW - Electronic books N1 - Includes bibliographical references and index; Remembering : dispossession, past wrongs and ancestral beginnings -- The weight of responsibility : repaying a debt and saving a race -- A plea for the remnant : promoting an Aboriginal future -- The sex question : the lot of Aboriginal women -- Civilising the frontier : demanding women protectors -- Compelling evidence : the rights of Aboriginal wives -- no good purpose : containment and consignment Kancubina : a vignette -- Under the black flag : claiming freedom, justice and representation; National edeposit: Available onsite at national, state and territory libraries N2 - Breaking the Silence recovers the conflicted politics of Aboriginal affairs in the first decades of the twentieth century. From 1905, when the report of the controversial Roth Royal Commission in Western Australia was made known to the public, to the eve of World War II, the condition, status and treatment of Aboriginal Australians were leading social questions that generated much discontent and underscored the awakening of a national conscience. Styled the 'new public', defenders lobbied governments to develop policies to ensure viable Aboriginal futures. In charting aspects of this politics, Alison Holland uncovers the defenders' programs for reform and the responses of governments to them. She shows how the consternation of the defenders was disproportionate to political will. Governments didn't listen or hear. They viewed the issues and solutions in different ways. Where defenders saw a humanitarian crisis, governments identified a colour problem in White Australia and developed policies to eradicate it. Breaking the Silence shows that there was no 'great Australian silence' on this question in the first half of the twentieth century. While the history books may have been silent, the politics on the ground, in the press, the auditorium, parliament, university, church and mission were anything but. Holland asks why this was so. What form did this politics take, what was at stake and what were the outcomes? In answering these questions the book provides important historical context for the consternation and debates still being had in the Australian polity over Aboriginal affairs UR - https://search.ebscohost.com/login.aspx?direct=true&scope=site&db=nlebk&AN=2316573 ER -