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Social Identities of Young Indigenou...
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SpringerLink (Online service)
Social Identities of Young Indigenous People in Contemporary Australia = Neo-colonial North, Yarrabah /
Record Type:
Language materials, printed : Monograph/item
Title/Author:
Social Identities of Young Indigenous People in Contemporary Australia/ by Hae Seong Jang.
Reminder of title:
Neo-colonial North, Yarrabah /
Author:
Jang, Hae Seong.
Description:
XXI, 244 p. 59 illus., 55 illus. in color.online resource. :
Contained By:
Springer Nature eBook
Subject:
Anthropology. -
Online resource:
https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-15569-2
ISBN:
9783319155692
Social Identities of Young Indigenous People in Contemporary Australia = Neo-colonial North, Yarrabah /
Jang, Hae Seong.
Social Identities of Young Indigenous People in Contemporary Australia
Neo-colonial North, Yarrabah /[electronic resource] :by Hae Seong Jang. - 1st ed. 2015. - XXI, 244 p. 59 illus., 55 illus. in color.online resource.
Part I: Backgorund -- Chapter 1: Introduction -- Chapter 2: Time, space and identity -- Chapter 3: Methodology -- Part II: The ethnographic fieldwork at Yarrabah -- Chapter 4: Talking to history: collected memories of Yarrabah -- Chapter 5: Narratives and social discourses in life history -- Chapter 6: Social identities within life history -- Chapter 7: Revitalising Yarrabah and decolonising everydayness -- Chapter 8: Conclusion. .
This volume is about the social identities of young Indigenous people in contemporary Australia, based on fieldwork in the rural community of Yarrabah, in Queensland. This case study of Yarrabah is based on seventeen ethnographic interviews with women and men in their twenties. With the aim of exploring how diverse social discourses have influenced the social identities of young Indigenous people in contemporary Australia, this book represents the life histories of these young people in Yarrabah in the context of both the institutions with which they interact and the everyday shape of life in Yarrabah. This volume also provides new material for discussion of the ways in which Indigenous value systems, broadly understood by the participants to be based on collectivism, constantly come into conflict with Western values based on individualism. While the young Indigenous people of Yarrabah do continuously interact not only with multi‑cultural Australia but also with global influences, they are constantly aware of their own distinctiveness in both contexts.
ISBN: 9783319155692
Standard No.: 10.1007/978-3-319-15569-2doiSubjects--Topical Terms:
558887
Anthropology.
LC Class. No.: HM545
Dewey Class. No.: 301
Social Identities of Young Indigenous People in Contemporary Australia = Neo-colonial North, Yarrabah /
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Part I: Backgorund -- Chapter 1: Introduction -- Chapter 2: Time, space and identity -- Chapter 3: Methodology -- Part II: The ethnographic fieldwork at Yarrabah -- Chapter 4: Talking to history: collected memories of Yarrabah -- Chapter 5: Narratives and social discourses in life history -- Chapter 6: Social identities within life history -- Chapter 7: Revitalising Yarrabah and decolonising everydayness -- Chapter 8: Conclusion. .
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This volume is about the social identities of young Indigenous people in contemporary Australia, based on fieldwork in the rural community of Yarrabah, in Queensland. This case study of Yarrabah is based on seventeen ethnographic interviews with women and men in their twenties. With the aim of exploring how diverse social discourses have influenced the social identities of young Indigenous people in contemporary Australia, this book represents the life histories of these young people in Yarrabah in the context of both the institutions with which they interact and the everyday shape of life in Yarrabah. This volume also provides new material for discussion of the ways in which Indigenous value systems, broadly understood by the participants to be based on collectivism, constantly come into conflict with Western values based on individualism. While the young Indigenous people of Yarrabah do continuously interact not only with multi‑cultural Australia but also with global influences, they are constantly aware of their own distinctiveness in both contexts.
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