oral history

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Diane Bell, in her book Daughters of the Dreaming, says that in Australia: ‘The written history was a celebration of the arrogance and chauvinism of the late nineteenth and twentieth century society’, but that the oral histories of Aboriginal peoples told a different tale. In the oral histories:

Irreplaceable ritual objects were stolen; water-holes were despoiled; the ecological domain of indigenous flora and fauna was rapidly transformed by intensive grazing; punitive parties massacred groups indiscriminately while rescue ‘pacification’ parties brought people in from the desert.

It has been the sharing of Aboriginal people’s memories as oral history which has allowed non-Aboriginal people to see the violence of colonization, and for this reason it is important that stories like Opal’s continue to be told. Oral history, thus conceived, can be valuable not just for setting the larger historical record straight but also in helping people tell their life stories. For example, anthropologist Jeremy Beckett who worked with Aboriginal man Myles Lalor in the production of his life sto...

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