- Title
- Listenin' up: re-imagining ourselves through stories of and from Country
- Creator
- Collins-Gearing, Brooke; Cadungog, Vivien; Camilleri, Sophie; Comensoli, Erin; Duncan, Elissa; Green, Leitesha; Phillips, Adam; Stone, Rebecca
- Relation
- M/C Journal: A Journal of Media and Culture Vol. 18, Issue 6
- Relation
- http://journal.media-culture.org.au/index.php/mcjournal/issue/view/re-imagine
- Publisher
- Queensland University of Technology, Creative Industries Faculty
- Resource Type
- journal article
- Date
- 2015
- Description
- In Senior Lawman Neidjie’s beautiful little book, with big knowledge, Story about Feeling (1989), he shares with us, his readers, the importance of feeling our connectedness with the land around us. We have heard his words and this is our effort to articulate our respect and responsibility in return. We are a small group of undergraduate students and a lecturer at the University of Newcastle (a mixed “mob” with non-Aboriginal and Aboriginal heritages) participating in an English course designed around listening to the knowledge stories of Country, in the context of Country as the energy and agency of the lands around us and not just a physical setting, as shared by those who know it best. We are a diverse group of people. We have different, individual, purposes for taking this course, but with a common willingness to listen which has been strengthened through our exposure to Aboriginal literature. This paper is the result of our lived experience of practice-led research. We have written this paper as a collective group and therefore we use “we” to represent and encompass our distinct voices in this shared learning journey. We write this paper within the walls, physically and psychologically, of western academia, built on the lands of the Darkinjung peoples. Our hope is to rethink the limits of epistemic boundaries in western discourses of education; to engage with Aboriginal ways of knowing predominantly through the pedagogical and personal act of listening. We aspire to reimagine our understanding of, and complicity with, public memory while simultaneously shifting our engagement with the land on which we stand, learn, and live. We ask ourselves: can we re-imagine the institutionalised space of our classroom through a dialogic pedagogy? To attempt to do this we have employed intersubjective dialogues, where our role is mostly that of listeners (readers) of stories of Country shared by Aboriginal voices and knowledges such as Neidjie’s. This paper is an articulation of our learning journey to re-imagine the tertiary classroom, re-imagine the relationship between Aboriginal and non-Aboriginal Australian knowledges, perspectives and peoples, re-imagine our collective consciousness on Aboriginal lands and, ultimately, to re-imagine ourselves.
- Subject
- re-imagine; Country; Aboriginal literature; cultural dialogues
- Identifier
- http://hdl.handle.net/1959.13/1315447
- Identifier
- uon:22943
- Identifier
- ISSN:1441-2616
- Language
- eng
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