作为见证的纪念:在科尔布鲁克和解公园纪念被偷走的一代20年

IF 0.1 0 ART
A. Atkinson-Phillips
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引用次数: 1

摘要

科尔布鲁克和解公园(Colebrook Reconciliation Park)是澳大利亚历史最悠久、规模最大的纪念公园,旨在纪念那些被迫与家庭和社区分离的土著儿童,他们被称为“被偷走的一代”。它覆盖了科尔布鲁克之家的旧址,这是1942年至1972年间为土著儿童设立的机构。在本文中,我认为科尔布鲁克和解公园可以被理解为一种见证公民身份的行为,在这种行为中,被偷走的一代的经历被呈现为对更广泛的澳大利亚公众的持续挑战。从1997年6月安装的一个小牌匾开始,公园现在是一个多层次的记忆空间,包括具象雕塑,诗歌,步行道和讲故事的圆圈,以及更多的实用功能,包括烧烤和厕所。与公园发展历史密切相关的是布莱克伍德和解小组的历史,以及它与幸存者集体Colebrook Tji Tji Tjuta的联系。本文讨论了Colebrook和解公园作为这种不断发展的关系的表达。本文通过强调不同的,有时是相互矛盾的,Colebrook故事的部分,探讨了该遗址的不同部分如何以不同的方式见证。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Commemoration as Witnessing: 20 Years of Remembering the Stolen Generations at Colebrook Reconciliation Park
Abstract The Colebrook Reconciliation Park is Australia’s oldest and most extensive memorial to acknowledge the forced separation of Aboriginal children from their families and communities, known as the “Stolen Generations.” It covers the site of the former Colebrook Home, an institution for Aboriginal children from 1942–1972. In this paper, I argue that the Colebrook Reconciliation Park can be understood as an act of witness citizenship in which the experience of the Stolen Generations is presented as an ongoing challenge to the wider Australian public. Beginning with a small plaque installed in June 1997, the Park is now a multi-layered memory space that includes figurative sculptures, poetry, a walking path and a storytelling circle, as well as more practical features including a barbecue and toilet block. Closely linked to the history of the Park’s development is the history of the Blackwood Reconciliation Group and its connection to the Colebrook Tji Tji Tjuta, a survivors’ collective. This paper discusses the Colebrook Reconciliation Park as an expression of that evolving relationship. Taking the reader on a tour through the site, this paper explores how different parts of the site bear witness in different ways by emphasising distinct, sometimes contradictory, parts of the Colebrook story.
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来源期刊
De Arte
De Arte ART-
CiteScore
0.20
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