Resisting the Far-Right: Indigenous Perspectives, Community Arts and Story-Based Strategy

This article explores how we might resist and confront anti-immigration and anti-refugee politics by addressing the social and historical well-spring from which these discriminatory and damaging politics emerge and take sustenance. In doing this, I draw upon the concept of story-based strategy and...

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Main Author: Chris D. Brown
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: UTS ePRESS 2020-02-01
Series:Cosmopolitan Civil Societies: An Interdisciplinary Journal
Subjects:
Online Access:https://epress.lib.uts.edu.au/journals/index.php/mcs/article/view/6765
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spelling doaj-3536be58fb4b4f7abfa6412b7225bc0a2020-11-25T02:04:06ZengUTS ePRESSCosmopolitan Civil Societies: An Interdisciplinary Journal1837-53912020-02-0111210.5130/ccs.v11.i2.6765Resisting the Far-Right: Indigenous Perspectives, Community Arts and Story-Based StrategyChris D. Brown0Centre for Social Impact, Swinburne University of Technology This article explores how we might resist and confront anti-immigration and anti-refugee politics by addressing the social and historical well-spring from which these discriminatory and damaging politics emerge and take sustenance. In doing this, I draw upon the concept of story-based strategy and the idea that our potential to address this issue relies on our capacity to fundamentally shift the dominant ways in which people understand and engage with it. This discussion occurs with reference to one practical application of story-based strategy – a community-arts project titled Stories of Hope and Migration – which attempted to re-frame the migration and refugee debate in Australia by funnelling it through a localised Indigenous perspective. In so doing, this article challenges the way in which early British migrants and their descendants have continually excised themselves from the rhetoric of migration, and furthermore, suggests that through a more nuanced conversation regarding the migration stories of all non-Aboriginal people, we might better promote a more historically aware, compassionate and inclusive society. https://epress.lib.uts.edu.au/journals/index.php/mcs/article/view/6765Far-rightStory-Based StrategyIndigenous PerspectivesCommunity Arts
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Chris D. Brown
spellingShingle Chris D. Brown
Resisting the Far-Right: Indigenous Perspectives, Community Arts and Story-Based Strategy
Cosmopolitan Civil Societies: An Interdisciplinary Journal
Far-right
Story-Based Strategy
Indigenous Perspectives
Community Arts
author_facet Chris D. Brown
author_sort Chris D. Brown
title Resisting the Far-Right: Indigenous Perspectives, Community Arts and Story-Based Strategy
title_short Resisting the Far-Right: Indigenous Perspectives, Community Arts and Story-Based Strategy
title_full Resisting the Far-Right: Indigenous Perspectives, Community Arts and Story-Based Strategy
title_fullStr Resisting the Far-Right: Indigenous Perspectives, Community Arts and Story-Based Strategy
title_full_unstemmed Resisting the Far-Right: Indigenous Perspectives, Community Arts and Story-Based Strategy
title_sort resisting the far-right: indigenous perspectives, community arts and story-based strategy
publisher UTS ePRESS
series Cosmopolitan Civil Societies: An Interdisciplinary Journal
issn 1837-5391
publishDate 2020-02-01
description This article explores how we might resist and confront anti-immigration and anti-refugee politics by addressing the social and historical well-spring from which these discriminatory and damaging politics emerge and take sustenance. In doing this, I draw upon the concept of story-based strategy and the idea that our potential to address this issue relies on our capacity to fundamentally shift the dominant ways in which people understand and engage with it. This discussion occurs with reference to one practical application of story-based strategy – a community-arts project titled Stories of Hope and Migration – which attempted to re-frame the migration and refugee debate in Australia by funnelling it through a localised Indigenous perspective. In so doing, this article challenges the way in which early British migrants and their descendants have continually excised themselves from the rhetoric of migration, and furthermore, suggests that through a more nuanced conversation regarding the migration stories of all non-Aboriginal people, we might better promote a more historically aware, compassionate and inclusive society.
topic Far-right
Story-Based Strategy
Indigenous Perspectives
Community Arts
url https://epress.lib.uts.edu.au/journals/index.php/mcs/article/view/6765
work_keys_str_mv AT chrisdbrown resistingthefarrightindigenousperspectivescommunityartsandstorybasedstrategy
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