Aboriginal Women, Law and Critical Race Theory: Storytelling From The Margins

Aboriginal Women, Law and Critical Race Theory: Storytelling From The Margins

by Nicole Watson
Aboriginal Women, Law and Critical Race Theory: Storytelling From The Margins

Aboriginal Women, Law and Critical Race Theory: Storytelling From The Margins

by Nicole Watson

eBook1st ed. 2022 (1st ed. 2022)

$52.49  $69.99 Save 25% Current price is $52.49, Original price is $69.99. You Save 25%.

Available on Compatible NOOK devices, the free NOOK App and in My Digital Library.
WANT A NOOK?  Explore Now

Related collections and offers


Overview

This book explores storytelling as an innovative means of improving understanding of Indigenous people and their histories and struggles including with the law. It uses the Critical Race Theory (‘CRT’) tool of ‘outsider’ or ‘counter’ storytelling to illuminate the practices that have been used by generations of Aboriginal women to create an outlaw culture and to resist their invisibility to law. Legal scholars are yet to use storytelling to bring the experiential knowledge of Aboriginal women to the centre of legal scholarship and yet this book demonstrates how this can be done by way of a new methodology that combines elements of CRT with speculative biography. In one chapter, the author tells the imagined story of Eliza Woree who featured prominently in the backdrop to the decision of the Supreme Court of Queensland in Dempsey v Rigg (1914) but whose voice was erased from the judgements. This accessible book adds a new and innovative dimension to the useof CRT to examine the nexus between race and settler colonialism. It speaks to those interested in Indigenous peoples and the law, Indigenous studies, Indigenous policy, Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander history, feminist studies, race and the law, and cultural studies.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9783030873271
Publisher: Palgrave Macmillan
Publication date: 12/10/2021
Series: Palgrave Studies in Race, Ethnicity, Indigeneity and Criminal Justice
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
File size: 313 KB

About the Author

Nicole Watson is an Aboriginal scholar from Queensland, who is descended from the Munanjali and Birri Gubba Peoples. She is a published novelist and a former columnist with the National Indigenous Times. Nicole is currently employed as the Director of the Academic Unit, Nura Gili Centre for Indigenous Programs, University of New South Wales.


Table of Contents

Chapter One: Introduction.- Chapter Two: CRT and Settler Colonial Societies.- Chapter Three: Aboriginal Women’s Outlaw Culture.- Chapter Four: The Story of Eliza Woree.- Chapter Five: Conclusion.

From the B&N Reads Blog

Customer Reviews