A Strange Time Machine: The Tracker, Black and White, and Rabbit‐Proof Fence
2004; Routledge; Volume: 35; Issue: 123 Linguagem: Inglês
10.1080/10314610408596277
ISSN1940-5049
Autores Tópico(s)Memory, Trauma, and Commemoration
ResumoHistorical films have become an important way of representing the past, and three films released in 2002 (The Tracker, Black and White, and Rabbit‐Proof Fence) express our current preoccupation with how the colonial past has shaped present Australian identity. These films use a range of cinematic techniques to construct particular relationships between past and present, Aboriginal and white. Distancing strategies of colonialism‐as‐violence absolve us, in the present, from responsibility for continuing inequalities, yet ironically more empathetic narratives have been accused of appropriating Aboriginality. These landmark films point toward the potential for broadening public debate about Australian history beyond its current narrowly forensic terms, and for using new narrative and visual techniques to construct a past which is linked to, rather than severed from the present.
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