Steering (towards a post apology Australia) without a rudder.
Lampert, Jo ; Phillips, Jean
The idea for this special issue of Outskirts originated with Kevin
Rudd's Apology to Indigenous Peoples after his election as Prime
Minister in 2008. The climate was hopeful with many Aboriginal and
Torres Strait Islander women (and non-Indigenous women, too) breathing a
sigh of relief that the disastrous effects of White Australia's
government policies had at last been symbolically, publicly and
officially acknowledged. There was also, though, skepticism about the
'real' change this Apology might have for Indigenous
Australians. Many of us wondered if the Apology would make any
difference at all in the 'real' world, where the gaps between
non-Indigenous and Indigenous Australians is still so glaringly apparent
in areas such as health, education, housing and employment (Fredericks,
2008:3; Behrendt 2008). We imagined this special issue of Outskirts
would provide a forum for feminists to explore the complexities around
the Apology which on the one hand provided a welcome gesture, long
overdue ... but also provided a kind of dare to the new government to
put their money where their mouth was. The Apology beamed a spotlight on
inequities with its implicit promise to move 'forward with
confidence to the future'.
By including in his speech Nanna Nungala Fejo's personal story
of having been stolen from her family in the early 1930s, Rudd seemed to
be speaking, at least in part, directly to Indigenous women. As in the
earlier Bringing Them Home report (1997), personal stories highlighted
ways women were especially affected by policies that that separated
women from children and children from families. By 2010, however,
Indigenous women were vocal in expressing their dismay that nothing much
had changed. At the International Indigenous Women's conference in
Darwin Indigenous representative Barbara Cummings said, 'There was
this enormous big apology by the Labor Party and nothing has
happened,' (Hall, 2010). Two years later and Rudd's apology
seemed to have been little more than lip-service.
Now we're not so sure it mattered, anyway. It seems we
didn't want Kevin Rudd as our leader. When we sent out the Call for
Papers for this issue we couldn't have imagined the rapid events
that saw Rudd deposed in 2010, nor would we have anticipated the tense
election that followed. Indigenous rights were all but forgotten by both
Julia Gillard (the new Prime Minister, Labour Party) and Tony Abbott
(Liberal Party, and now Leader of the Opposition), in their election
campaigns. This was not a campaign based on hope, but one that tapped
instead into fears: of a flagging economy, of (imaginary) threats posed
by new immigrants. This election was of concern to feminists in new
ways, but Indigenous issues seemed largely invisible. Indeed Gillard,
who had the thankless task of having to represent all women and prove
herself as a worthy opponent to a shamelessly sexist opponent was now
dubbed 'the post-hope Prime Minister' (Barry 2010) as though
the Apology was old news. Further, Gillard was repeatedly asked, during
the election, to 'apologise' to Kevin Rudd for 'knifing
him in the back' (Maynard & Chalmers 2010). When it comes to
Gillard, discourses of 'apology' acquire an added layer of
complexity. So now we have our first female Prime minister. And yet ...
nothing much changes for Indigenous women.
Here, nevertheless, is the post-Apology Issue of outskirts. Bronwyn
Fredericks examines the history of the ALP, and challenges our new Prime
Minister to turn her focus on what her party is doing, post-Apology. In
her paper on Australia's post-Apology landscape, Siobhan Marren
gives an historical context to Kevin Rudd's Apology situating
Gillard's post-apology Australia at the praxis between narrative
and feminist ethics. Susanne Gannon explores the difficult space Gillard
is forced to occupy in how she has been represented in popular magazines
for girls. Mairead Shanahan, an undergraduate student, offers an essay
of hope in her discussion of the Townsville Mums and Babies program.
With our call for papers we unintentionally gave our authors a
difficult brief--to write about a post-Apology feminism at the very
moment in which the context was changing. Julia Gillard's election
gives us hope in some ways, but her election stalls the momentum of The
Apology in others. How many 'posts' do we need before we see
real change?
References
Barry, Tony. (August, 2010). 'The post-hope Prime
Minister'. Institute of Public Affairs Review 62(3):115. Accessed 4
October, 2010.
Behrendt, Larissa. (19 March, 2008). 'What follows
sorry'. Public Address presented at the University of Technology,
Sydney.Transcript Accessed 4 October 2010.
Human Rights and Equal Opportunity Commission. (1997) Bringing them
home: National Inquiry into the Separation of Aboriginal and Torres
Strait Islander Children and their Families. Canberra: Australian Human
Rights Commission.
Fredericks, Bronwyn L. (2008) Stolen generations: After the
Apology. National Women's Journal NTEU Frontline. 16(1). p.16.
Hall, Lex. (3 September, 2010). 'We just want enough to be
comfortable, says women taken from their families as children'. The
Australian Accessed 8 October, 2010.
Maynard, Neale & Chalmers, Emma. (5 August, 2010).
'Readers vent anger at Julia's partial apology for knifing
Kevin Rudd' The Courier Mail, 5 October 2010, 15.
Razak, Izkhandar. (24 August, 2010). 'No changes' after
Apology to Stolen Generations'. Australian Broadcasting Corporation
News. Accessed 4 October 2010.
Reference this Introduction as:
Lampert, Jo and Jean Phillips. 'Steering (Towards a Post
Apology Australia) Without a Rudder.' Outskirts: Feminisms Along
the Edge 23 online. http://www.chloe.uwa.edu.au/outskirts/archive/volume23/lampert
CRICOS Provider Code: 00126G Last updated 12 Nov 2010 13:20
Location: http://www.chloe.uwa.edu.au/page/168874
Jo Lampert Jean Phillips, Guest Editors
Jo Lampert is a Senior Lecturer in The School of Cultural and
Language Studies at the Queensland University of Technology in Brisbane.
She has been working in Indigenous education for the past fifteen years.
Jean Phillips is a Murri woman (Wakka Wakka) from south east
Queensland. Originally trained as a primary teacher, she has been
teaching in the area of critical culture studies at the Queensland
University of Technology since 1996. Her central research and personal
interest is the interaction between Indigenous knowledge systems and
western colonising traditions-particularly with regard to ways in which
non-Indigenous peoples construct understandings of Self in relation to
Indigenous peoples. Her PhD thesis examines resistance by non-Indigenous
pre-service teachers to compulsory Indigenous studies.