Engaging the Public Intimacy of Whiteness: the Indigenous Protest Poetry of Romaine Moreton

Authors

  • Anne Brewster UNSW

Keywords:

aboriginal, poetry, romaine moreton

Abstract

In this article I embark upon an investigation of the politico-aesthetics of a trajectory of Australian indigenous poetry which overtly undertakes political and social critique and in doing so foregrounds the relations between colonial history and representation. I investigate whether the category of ‘protest literature’ can do any useful cultural and literary work in talking about this literature. I take the work of Romaine Moreton as exemplary of this tradition and examine how her poetry works rhetorically and performatively on its audience.

Author Biography

Anne Brewster, UNSW

Anne Brewster teaches at the University of New South Wales in Sydney, Australia. Her books include Reading Aboriginal Women’s Autobiography (1996) and Literary Formations (1995). She co-edited, with Angeline O’Neill and Rosemary van den Berg, an anthology of Australian Indigenous Writing, Those Who Remain Will Always Remember (2000).

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Published

2008-05-02