• This Essay Can Be Used as a Book Report of "My Place" by Sally Morgan

     

    Essays3 Literature

Evaluation:
Published: 10.01.2004.
Language: English
Level: Secondary school
Literature: n/a
References: Not used
  • Essays 'This Essay Can Be Used as a Book Report of "My Place" by Sally Morgan', 1.
  • Essays 'This Essay Can Be Used as a Book Report of "My Place" by Sally Morgan', 2.
  • Essays 'This Essay Can Be Used as a Book Report of "My Place" by Sally Morgan', 3.
Extract

Sally Morgan grew up unaware that she was Aboriginal. When, as an adult, she discovered her Aboriginal heritage, she was consumed by the desire to understand its significance:
What did it really mean to be Aboriginal? I'd never lived off the land and been a hunter and a gatherer. I'd never participated in corroborees or heard stories of the Dreamtime. I'd lived all my life in Suburbia and told everyone I was Indian. I hardly knew any Aboriginal people. What did it mean for someone like me? [1]
By delving into her family's past and eliciting the personal histories of her mother, grandmother and great-uncle and incorporating them into her autobiography, Sally Morgan is claiming the dreadful legacy of culture contact between white and Aboriginal Australia as integral to her identity as an Aborigine.

Author's comment
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