1996
DOI: 10.1111/j.1835-9310.1996.tb00331.x
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Sickening Bodies: How Racism and Essentialism Feature in Aboriginal Women's Discourse about Health1

Abstract: In the last decade there has been much interest in the concepts of ‘racism’ and ‘essentialism’ and the ways in which these notions have been appropriated by Aboriginal people to demarcate a specifically Aboriginal space (Cowlishaw 1986; Lattas 1993; Langton 1981; Morris 1988; Muecke 1992). Central to these concerns is the issue of black/white relations and the specificities of racial oppression. Following these concerns in this article I explore the nexus between the metaphorical dismemberment of self and the … Show more

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Cited by 12 publications
(9 citation statements)
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“…While the physical environment was acknowledged by participants as having an impact on Indigenous children, the social and cultural environments were particularly emphasised. Interestingly, non-Indigenous participants did not acknowledge or seem aware of the existence of racist attitudes and processes in the organisations within which they provided services, and how this racism continues to negatively impact on Indigenous people's access to and use of 'mainstream' health-care services (Henry, Houston & Mooney, 2004;Mitchell, 1996;NACCHO, 2001). Participants acknowledged the importance of understanding Indigenous culture and the environmental background of Indigenous clients, but they also warned against making generalisations.…”
Section: Understand the Impact Of The Environmentmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…While the physical environment was acknowledged by participants as having an impact on Indigenous children, the social and cultural environments were particularly emphasised. Interestingly, non-Indigenous participants did not acknowledge or seem aware of the existence of racist attitudes and processes in the organisations within which they provided services, and how this racism continues to negatively impact on Indigenous people's access to and use of 'mainstream' health-care services (Henry, Houston & Mooney, 2004;Mitchell, 1996;NACCHO, 2001). Participants acknowledged the importance of understanding Indigenous culture and the environmental background of Indigenous clients, but they also warned against making generalisations.…”
Section: Understand the Impact Of The Environmentmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…and so on, the phenomenon of suffering as an experiential domain of everyday social life has been splintered into measurable attributes'' (1997:xx). We must attend, in other words, to the social, economic, and political realms of distress and how they articulate in women's lives (Dion Stout 1995;Dion Stout et al 2001;Mitchell 1996). The result is that social and community engagement with problems expressed through the language of stress are curbed as issues are realigned outside of the realm of everyday social life particularly where satisfying the initiatives of outside funding sources or programs may be involved.…”
Section: Discussion: Closing the Gap Between Knowledge And Interventionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…He was also the brother of Australia's first prime minister, Edmond Barton, who presided over the passage of the Immigration Restriction Act 1901 (Soldatic & Fiske, 2009). Thus, unlike 'the slave', erasure through either direct means or via policies of assimilation was the defining feature of indigenous (Mitchell, 1996) and disability relations (Meekosha & Dowse, 1997) in the settler colony. With no state requirement for procreation, indigenous and disabled women's fecundity was posed as a threat to the production and reproduction of the white able-bodied masculine settler nation.…”
Section: Disability and Indigeneity In The White Able-bodied Settlermentioning
confidence: 97%