Monash University
Browse

Feeling and Hearing Country

Download (424.02 kB)
journal contribution
posted on 2020-12-21, 01:14 authored by Anne PoelinaAnne Poelina, Sandra Wooltorton, Sandra Harben, Len Collard, Pierre Horwitz, David Palmer
Dinah Norman a-Marrngawi explained that her Country cannot hear English, it can only hear Yanyuwa. We support Dinah’s position – because the English language underpins the Australian colonial project, and has been used to separate, ignore and take from Country, her peoples and their knowledges. Country responds to people, however, for example when there is empathic, creative communication and engagement with landscapes, and when liyan and wirrin is the basis for human and ecological wellbeing. We propose a practice for people new to this participation; of ‘becoming family with place’. It integrates four ways of knowing, to celebrate an ontopoetic for Country that is experiential, creative, propositional and participative – a post-conceptual knowing for human flourishing. It is for coming home to Country, and is for learning and educational purposes.

PAN: Philosophy Activism Nature no., 14, pp. 6-15

History

Usage metrics

    Licence

    Exports

    RefWorks
    BibTeX
    Ref. manager
    Endnote
    DataCite
    NLM
    DC