Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://hdl.handle.net/1959.11/11614
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dc.contributor.authorRyan, John Sen
dc.date.accessioned2012-11-02T09:38:00Z-
dc.date.issued1993-
dc.identifier.citationAustralian Folklore, v.8, p. 167-171en
dc.identifier.issn0819-0852en
dc.identifier.urihttps://hdl.handle.net/1959.11/11614-
dc.description.abstractIn the autumn of this year there died the Aboriginal activist, artist and writer Kevin Gilbert, who was born on the banks of the Kalara [Lachlan] River at Condobolin, New South Wales, on 10 July 1933. The youngest of the eight children of Jack Gilbert and Rachel Naden, and orphaned at seven, his early life was harshly spent 'on the receiving end of White Australia's apartheid system', segregated, and lacking any social service payments, while as a teenager he saw 'my brothers who had served in the second world war as enlisted men hunted like felons from the bar of a pub'. As he wrote trenchantly in 1988 (p.185) "I was born Black. Black and honest in a white society that spoke oh so easily of 'justice', 'democracy', 'fair go', 'Christian love', and had me and mine living in old tin sheds ... under ... treasures ... from the white man's rubbish tip." Returned from orphanages to the Wiradjuri country at the age of eleven, he picked grapes and did other seasonal work in the process of finding 'my reality, my people', when "with all the rags [and] little tucker, ours was a greater love, greater truth and being, a greater spirituality than any one of the white Christians ever possessed." (186) These seminal bonding experiences are enshrined in his 1968 drama 'The Cherry Pickers', a milestone stage text which presents with unswerving integrity the seemingly squalid yet magnificently warm lifestyle of a family of eleven.en
dc.languageenen
dc.publisherAustralian Folklore Association, Incen
dc.relation.ispartofAustralian Folkloreen
dc.titleKevin Gilbert, a shaper of the modern lore of his folken
dc.typeJournal Articleen
dc.subject.keywordsAboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Cultural Studiesen
dc.subject.keywordsSocial and Cultural Anthropologyen
dc.subject.keywordsMortalityen
local.contributor.firstnameJohn Sen
local.subject.for2008160304 Mortalityen
local.subject.for2008160104 Social and Cultural Anthropologyen
local.subject.for2008200201 Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Cultural Studiesen
local.subject.seo2008950503 Understanding Australias Pasten
local.subject.seo2008970119 Expanding Knowledge through Studies of the Creative Arts and Writingen
local.subject.seo2008970122 Expanding Knowledge in Philosophy and Religious Studiesen
local.profile.schoolSchool of Humanities, Arts and Social Sciencesen
local.profile.emailjryan@une.edu.auen
local.output.categoryC2en
local.record.placeauen
local.record.institutionUniversity of New Englanden
local.identifier.epublicationsrecordune-20121101-105748en
local.publisher.placeAustraliaen
local.format.startpage167en
local.format.endpage171en
local.identifier.volume8en
local.contributor.lastnameRyanen
dc.identifier.staffune-id:jryanen
local.profile.roleauthoren
local.identifier.unepublicationidune:11813en
dc.identifier.academiclevelAcademicen
local.title.maintitleKevin Gilbert, a shaper of the modern lore of his folken
local.output.categorydescriptionC2 Non-Refereed Article in a Scholarly Journalen
local.search.authorRyan, John Sen
local.uneassociationUnknownen
local.year.published1993en
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