Towards Reconciliation: Teaching Gender and Music in the Context of Indigenous Australian Women's Performance

Authors

  • Elizabeth Mackinlay The University of Queensland

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.1017/S1326011100001861

Abstract

This paper addresses issues related to the conflicting paradigms of Western systems of knowledge and Indigenous systems of knowledge within the context of teaching about gender and music in Indigenous Australian women's performance practice. I will first describe the subject which I am currently teaching at the University of Queensland. I will then discuss the theoretical concerns related to teaching about gender and music in terms of the differences between Western and Indigenous ways of knowing about these concepts. I will then examine the conflicts which arise in the context of teaching Indigenous studies within a non-Indigenous framework. Finally, conclusions will be drawn in regard to the reconciling the differences between Indigenous and non-Indigenous ways of knowing and the implications for teaching this type of curriculum on an international scale.

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Published

1998-09-01

How to Cite

Mackinlay, E. (1998). Towards Reconciliation: Teaching Gender and Music in the Context of Indigenous Australian Women’s Performance. The Australian Journal of Indigenous Education, 26(2), 18–27. https://doi.org/10.1017/S1326011100001861

Issue

Section

Section C: Tertiary Education

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