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Metropolitan Collections: Reaching Out to Regional Australia

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journal contribution
posted on 2025-05-10, 19:50 authored by Damien Webb, Rachel FranksRachel Franks
This article looks briefly at the collection, consultation, and digital sharing of stories essential to the histories of the First Nations peoples of Australia. Focusing on materials held in Sydney, New South Wales two case studies—the object known as the Proclamation Board and the George Augustus Robinson Papers—explore how materials can be shared with Aboriginal peoples of the region now known as Tasmania. Specifically, the authors of this article (a Palawa man and an Australian woman of European descent) ask how can the idea of the privileging of Indigenous voices, within Eurocentric cultural collections, be transformed from rhetoric to reality? Moreover, how can we navigate this complex work, that is made even more problematic by distance, through the utilisation of knowledge networks which are geographically isolated from the collections holding stories crucial to Indigenous communities? In seeking to answer these important questions, this article looks at how cultural, emotional, and intellectual ownership can be divested from the physical ownership of a collection in a way that repatriates—appropriately and sensitively—stories of Aboriginal Australia and of colonisation.

History

Journal title

M/C Journal

Volume

22

Issue

3

Publisher

Queensland University of Technology

Language

  • en, English

College/Research Centre

College of Human and Social Futures

School

School of Humanities, Creative Industries and Social Sciences

Rights statement

This work is open access, licenced under a Creative Commons Attribution - Noncommercial - No Derivatives 4.0 Licence (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/).

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