Black man's houses : SUB HDG
(2014, original release: 1992)

Nonfiction

eVideo

Provider: Kanopy

Details

DESCRIPTION

1 online resource (1 video file, 58 min. 15 sec.) : digital, stereo., sound, color

ISBN/ISSN
1042122
LANGUAGE
English
NOTES

Winner, best Australian film: Melbourne Film Festival

More than a hundred years after the Tasmanian Aborigines were declared extinct, their descendants set out to reclaim the lost graves of their ancestors on Flinders Island in Bass Strait. The neglected burial site at Wybalenna (or 'Black Man's Houses') which, in the 1830s was Australia's first segregated Reserve, is now a battleground dividing a community. Although set on a tiny island, BLACK MAN'S HOUSES has major relevance in a post-colonial world which has underestimated the ability of Indigenous cultures to evolve, to adapt and to incorporate their conquerors. "This film is an open-hearted and deeply moving story of what makes us black." - Greg Lehman, Riawunna Centre for Aboriginal Education, Tasmania. "In a period when national and racial identity problems are in the forefront of world developments, this film has much to tell us about the survival of cultural identity in the face of generations of adversity." - Prof. Henry Reynolds, historian & author.--Kanopy

Warning: Discretion must be used when viewing this with Aboriginal people

Producers, John Moore & Steve Thomas ; written & directed by Steve Thomas

Originally produced by Ronin Films in 1992

Mode of access: World Wide Web

Additional Credits