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This book examines the radical intervention of the
German-Australian Lutheran missionary F. W. Albrecht in the
education of Aboriginal children. Albrecht’s ideas about consent,
freedom of choice and personal autonomy were expressed in schemes
designed to educate and empower Aboriginal people and efforts to
find Aboriginal futures through education, training and employment.
This book explores how Aboriginal people understood Albrecht’s
work and the Enlightenment concepts on which it was based. In the
context of an Anglo-Australian settler-colonialism that sought to
systematically remove the freedom and autonomy of Indigenous
people, this study demonstrates how those who participated in the
Albrecht scheme were able to reconstruct themselves in ways that
fused their own Aboriginal culture and identity with the ideas and
values imported from an enlightened Germany. This book will appeal
to students and scholars of cultural history, colonialism,
Lutheranism, race and ethnicity and Indigenous studies. It will
also be illuminating reading to policymakers searching for a deeper
understanding of colonial interventions in Indigenous communities.
The Indigenous peoples of Australia have a proud history of
participation and the achievement of excellence in Australian
sports. Historically, Australian sports have provided a rare and
important social context in which Indigenous Australians could
engage with and participate in non-Indigenous society. Today,
Indigenous Australian people in sports continue to provide
important points of reference around which national public dialogue
about racial and cultural relations in Australia takes place. Yet
much media coverage surrounding these issues and almost all
academic interest concerning Indigenous people and Australian
sports is constructed from non-Indigenous perspectives. With a few
notable exceptions, the racial and cultural implications of
Australian sports as viewed from an Indigenous Australian Studies
perspective remains understudied. The media coverage and academic
discussion of Indigenous people and Australian sports is largely
constructed within the context of Anglo-Australian nationalist
discourse, and becomes most emphasised when reporting on aspects of
'racial and cultural' explanations of Indigenous sporting
excellence and failures associated anomalous behaviour. This book
investigates the many ways that Indigenous Australians have engaged
with Australian sports and the racial and cultural readings that
have been associated with these engagements. Questions concerning
the importance that sports play in constructions of Australian
indigeneities and the extent to which these have been maintained as
marginal to Australian national identity are the central critical
themes of this book. This book was published as a special issue of
Sport in Society.
Research on Indigenous participation in sport offers many
opportunities to better understand the political issues of
equality, empowerment, self-determination and protection of culture
and identity. This volume compares and conceptualises the
sociological significance of Indigenous sports in different
international contexts. The contributions, all written by
Indigenous scholars and those working directly in Indigenous/Native
Studies units, provide unique studies of contemporary experiences
of Indigenous sports participation. The papers investigate current
understandings of Indigeneity found to circulate throughout sports,
sports organisations and Indigenous communities. by (1): situating
attitudes to racial and cultural difference within the broader
sociological processes of post colonial Indigenous worlds (2):
interrogating perceptions of Indigenous identity with reference to
contemporary theories of identity drawn from Indigenous Studies and
(3): providing insight to increased Indigenous participation,
empowerment and personal development through sport with reference
to sociological theory.
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