This is a bibliography that goes with my latest zine on whiteness. If you haven’t read it and would like a copy, shoot me an email with your snail mail address and i’ll post you one.

Bibliography

Brantlinger, P. (2003) “Darwin and After” in Dark Vanishings: Discourse on the extinction of primitive races, 1830-1930, Cornell University Press, London, p. 167.

CrimethInk Workers’ Collective (2001), Days of Love, Nights of War, CrimethInk Free Press, Canada, p.111.

Frankenberg, R. (1993), “Thinking through Race”, in White Women, Race Matters. The Social Construction of Whiteness, University of Minnesota Press, USA, pp.137-190.

Johnson, Dianne D. (2007), Sacred waters: the Story of the Blue Mountains Gully Traditional Owners, Halstead Press, Broadway NSW.

Lippmann, Lorna (1994), Generations of Resistance: Mabo and Justice, Longman Cheshire, Melbourne.

McGrath, A. (ed) (1995), “A National Story” in Contested Ground: Australian Aborigines under the British Crown, Allen & Unwin, St Leonards. p.1.

McIntosh, Peggy (1988), White Privilege: Unpacking the Invisible Knapsack, internet resource accessed 22.03.08, http://seamonkey.ed.asu.edu/~mcisaac/emc598ge/Unpacking.html

Montag (1997) in A. Moreton-Robinson (2004), “Whiteness, Epistemology and Indigenous representation” in A. Moreton-Robinson (ed.) Whitening Race: Essays in Social and Cultural Criticism, Aboriginal Studies Press, pp.75-77.

Moreton-Robinson, A. (2004), “Whiteness, Epistemology and Indigenous representation” in A. Moreton-Robinson (ed.) Whitening Race: Essays in Social and Cultural Criticism, Aboriginal Studies Press, p.75.

NSW Department of Health, (2004), Communicating Positively: A guide to Appropriate Aboriginal Terminology.

Reynolds, Henry, (1990), The Other Side of the Frontier, Penguin Books, Victoria.

Reynolds, Henry, (1999), Why Weren’t we Told? A personal search for the truth about our history, Penguin Books, Victoria.

Images

1. Renata Field (2008), collage of Gathering Ground poster, 2006;

http://blogs.usyd.edu.au/sydneylife/2006/11/the_block.html

2. Renata Field (2008), collage of Watkins, Carleton (1867), Cape Horn near Celilo.

3. Georg Grosz (1918), Fit for Active Duty or A-1: The Miracle Workers,

http://www.blackfive.net/main/2006/02/responses_to_to.html

4. The recycling bin at the photocopy shop.

5. A. Freycinet, ‘Marriage Ceremony’ in Aldo Massola (1971), The Aborigines of South-Eastern Australia As They Were.

6. In CrimethInc Workers’ Collective (2001), Days of Love, Nights of War, CrimethInk Free Press, Canada.

7. In Better Homes and Gardens (July 2008).

8. Gerhard Wahrig (1967), Bildwoerterbuch.

9. CrimethInc Workers’ Collective (2001), Days of Love, Nights of War, CrimethInk Free Press, Canada.

10. Google image search for “white woman gardening”.

11. Google image search for “white girl”.

12. Renata Field (2008), collage.

13 + 14. The recycling bin at the photocopy shop.

15. Map of the Blue Mountains district in Dianne D. Johnson (2007), Sacred waters : the Story of the Blue Mountains Gully Traditional Owners.

16. David Breakspear (2007), ‘Map of Aboriginal Reserves around Lake Burragorang’ in Sacred waters : the Story of the Blue Mountains Gully Traditional Owners.

17. David Horton (2004), http://www.janamadesigns.com/wavehill.htm

18. CrimethInc Workers’ Collective (2001), Days of Love, Nights of War, CrimethInk Free Press, Canada.

21. Map of Washington DC

23. Renata Field (2008), collage.

24. CrimethInc Workers’ Collective (2001), Days of Love, Nights of War, CrimethInk Free Press, Canada.

25. www.kooriweb.org/gst/genocide/neville2.jpg

26. Ernst Haechel (1874), Anthropogenie.

27. Google image search for “white feminist”

28. An amazing comic artist who left their work in the recycling bin at the photocopy store.

29. CrimethInc Workers’ Collective (2001), Days of Love, Nights of War, CrimethInk Free Press, Canada.

30. The photocopy shop recycling bin.

31. Gerhard Wahrig (1967), Bildwoerterbuch.

32. http://www.liswa.wa.gov.au/federation/iss/086_abor.htm

33. Amanda Jane Reynolds (ed.) (2006), Keeping Culture: Aboriginal Tasmania, National Museum of Australia Press, Canberra. and a silly comic i found somewhere on the internet.

35. CrimethInc Workers’ Collective (2001), Days of Love, Nights of War, CrimethInk Free Press, Canada.

36. WA Cawthorne, Aborigines Watching a Sailing Ship, Mitchell Library, State Library of NSW.

38. George Hamilton (1846), Overlanders attacking the Natives, Mitchell Library, State Library of NSW.

39. Colins Camp, Hobart (1804) in Amanda Jane Reynolds (ed.) (2006), Keeping Culture: Aboriginal Tasmania, National Museum of Australia Press, Canberra.

40. Comic in the Melbourne Punch (1856), La Trobe Collection, State Library of Victoria.

41. Alfred Scott Broad, “… the revenge of the White, as they are hunted down and shot like dogs”, National Library of Australia.

42. CrimethInc Workers’ Collective (2001), Days of Love, Nights of War, CrimethInk Free Press, Canada.

43. Guy Debord (1957), Psycho-geographic map of the San Diego/Tijuana Border region.

44. Schalten Sie doch mal Spanien ein! poster, http://forum.mysnip.de/read.php?8773,204474

45. Google image searc for “terrorist

46. In Better Homes and Gardens (July 2008).

47. The Aboriginal Tent Embassy Canberra (1972), in Lorna Lippmann, Generations of Resistance: Mabo and Justice, Longman Cheshire, Melbourne.

Click to View a Larger Image

In their research on comparative racial characteristics, anthropologists examined and measured Aboriginal skulls and teeth. Scientists added Aboriginal heads to their private collections or sent them to British and European museums. Aboriginal people are still trying to get back the skeletal remains of their ancestors so they can be given appropriate burial rites.
(W. Ramsay Smith, ‘The Place of the Australian Aboriginal in Recent Anthropological Research’, Australasian Association for the Advancement of Science. Proceedings. 1907. Mitchell Library, State Library of New South Wales.)