Stranger Country
Page 33
Parliament of Western Australia 1905, Aborigines Act 1905, http://nla.gov.au/nla.obj-55208686
Perkins, Rachel et al. 2008, First Australians, Victoria Miegunyah Press, Melbourne
Philip Jones 1990, ‘Unaipon, David’, Australian Dictionary of Biography, National Centre of Biography, Australian National University, http://adb.anu.edu.au/biography/unaipon-david-8898/text15631
Phillips, A.A. 2006, AA Phillips on the Cultural Cringe, Melbourne University Press
Pike, Andrew, et al. 2014, Message from Mungo, Ronin Films, Canberra
Plumwood, Val 2000, ‘Being prey’ Utne, no. 100, July–August 2000
Queensland Figaro 1883, 19 May, p. 1, http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article83677319
Ramsay, G.M. 2001, Contentious Connections: Removals, legislation and Indigenous-Chinese contacts, University of Queensland, Brisbane
Reynolds, Henry & Rowley, Charles Dunford 1982, The Other Side of the Frontier: Aboriginal resistance to the European invasion of Australia, Penguin, Melbourne
Robert Lindsay 1986, ‘Nanya (1835–1895)’, Australian Dictionary of Biography, National Centre of Biography, Australian National University, http://adb.anu.edu.au/biography/nanya-7725/text13533
Rose, Deborah Bird 2004, Reports from a Wild Country: Ethics for decolonisation, UNSW Press, Sydney
Sinatra, Jim & Murphy, Phin, 1999, Listen to the People, Listen to the Land, Melbourne University Press
Soutphommasane, Tim 2009, Reclaiming Patriotism: Nation-building for Australian progressives, Monash University, National Centre for Australian Studies, Cambridge University Press, Melbourne
Spencer, Baldwin & Gillen, Francis James 1938, The Native Tribes of Central Australia, Macmillan, London
Stephenson, Peta 2003, Beyond Black and White: Aborigines, Asian-Australians and the national imaginary (PhD thesis), The Australian Centre, University of Melbourne
Stephenson, Peta 2009, ‘Keeping It in the Family: Partnerships between Indigenous and Muslim Communities in Australia’ Aboriginal History, vol. 33, pp. 97–116
Tacon, Paul et al. 2010, ‘A Minimum Age for Early Depictions of Southeast Asian Praus in the Rock Art of Arnhem Land, Northern Territory’, Australian Archaeology, vol. 71, December 2010
Tacon, Paul 2005, ‘Chains of Connection’ Griffith REVIEW, no. 9, pp. 70–76
Tobler, Ray et al. 2017, ‘Aboriginal mitogenomes reveal 50,000 years of regionalism in Australia’, Nature, vol. 544, no. 7649, pp. 180–184
Walker, David 2009, Anxious Nation: Australia and the rise of Asia, 1850–1939, SSS Publications, New Delhi
Walker, David 2013, Broken Narratives: Reflections on the history of Australia’s Asian connections, 1880s to the present, Center for Australian Studies, Otemon Gakuin University, Osaka
Walker, David, & Sobocinska, Agnieszka 2012, Australia’s Asia: From yellow peril to Asian century, UWA Publishing, Perth
Walker, Richard 1986, Living with Crocodiles, Australian Broadcasting Corporation
Watson, Helen & Chambers, David Wade 1989, Singing the Land, Signing the Land: A portfolio of exhibits, Deakin University Press, Geelong
Western Australian Museum 2015, Lustre: Pearling & Australia: Uncover Saltwater Country’s natural treasures, objects of great beauty, power and desire, Perth
Wilkins, Robert 2014, Australia’s Secret Heroes: The WWII exploits of Australia’s first covert force, Special Broadcasting Service, Sydney
Willandra Lakes Traditional Tribal Groups Elders Council and New South Wales National Parks and Wildlife Service 2018, Visit Mungo National Park, http://www.visitmungo.com.au
Willshire, William Henry 1888, The Aborigines of Central Australia: With a vocabulary of the dialect of the Alice Springs natives
Yee, Glenice 2006, Through Chinese Eyes: The Chinese experience in the Northern Territory 1874–2004, Darwin
Yu, Sarah & Pigram, Bart & Shioji, Maya 2015, ‘Lustre: Reflections on pearling’ Griffith REVIEW, no. 47, pp. 251–261
Monica Tan is an Australian writer of Chinese heritage, born and raised on Eora and Dharug country. When she is not writing she is teaching Australian Studies and working in politics. Prior to that she worked as a journalist at The Guardian in Sydney and spent her late twenties living in China studying Mandarin and working for Greenpeace. Stranger Country is her first book.