@article{birch_nothing_1992, title = {'{Nothing} {Has} {Changed}': {The} {Making} and {Unmaking} of {Koori} {Culture}}, volume = {51}, shorttitle = {'{Nothing} {Has} {Changed}'}, url = {https://search.informit.org/doi/abs/10.3316/INFORMIT.128835031083350}, doi = {10.3316/informit.128835031083350}, abstract = {The decision by the Victorian Minister of Tourism to announce the 'restoration' of the original Aboriginal name 'Guriward' of the Grampians mountain range in western Victoria in 1989 without consulting the local Koori community is discussed. It is suggested that the transformation of Koori rock-art sites as tourist centres along with the partial and selective name changes demonstrated that the white Australians still indulged in an unchanged behaviour of altering Koori culture according to their wishes since they first visited the area in 1836.}, number = {2}, urldate = {2021-08-23}, journal = {Meanjin}, author = {Birch, Tony}, year = {1992}, note = {Number: 2 ZSCC: 0000103 Publisher: Melbourne University Publishing}, keywords = {Urban and cultural heritage}, pages = {229--242,244--246}, } @article{birch_nothing_1992, title = {‘{Nothing} {Has} {Changed}’: {The} {Making} and {Unmaking} of {Koori} {Culture}}, shorttitle = {‘{Nothing} {Has} {Changed}’}, url = {https://meanjin.com.au/essays/nothing-has-changed-the-making-and-unmaking-of-koori-culture/}, abstract = {You get somebody coming in, a foreigner at that, trying to tell us to rename our mountains. —Bob Stone, Stawell town councillor In March 1989 the Victorian Minister for Tourism, Steve Crabb, announced that the Grampians mountain range in western Victoria would ‘revert to their Aboriginal name, Guriward’ (which after further research was altered to Gariwerd). Although this initiative came from the Victorian Tourism Commission, and the local Koori community had not yet been con­sulted, the minister felt that he could already announce the names that would be ‘restored’: I expect that the Grampians will be known as Guriward, the […]}, language = {en-AU}, urldate = {2021-08-25}, journal = {Meanjin}, author = {Birch, Tony}, year = {1992}, keywords = {Indigenous knowledge, Indigenous peoples}, } @article{birch_friday_2018, title = {Friday essay: recovering a narrative of place - stories in the time of climate change}, url = {https://theconversation.com/friday-essay-recovering-a-narrative-of-place-stories-in-the-time-of-climate-change-95067}, urldate = {2021-03-05}, journal = {The Conversation}, author = {Birch, Tony}, month = apr, year = {2018}, keywords = {Indigenous knowledge, Urban and cultural heritage, Urban planning}, } @incollection{birch_shrine_2020, address = {Melbourne, Australia}, title = {Shrine of {Remembrance}, {Melbourne} 15 {April}, 2018}, volume = {Volume Three}, isbn = {978-0-648-77022-0}, url = {https://trove.nla.gov.au/work/245377212}, abstract = {Transcript of a talk by Tony Birch that took place at the Shrine of Remembrance on the Indigenous protest movement Camp Sovereignty and the significance of monuments in shaping collective values.}, language = {English}, booktitle = {The {Politics} of {Public} {Space}}, publisher = {OFFICE}, author = {Birch, Tony}, year = {2020}, keywords = {Land rights, Urban and cultural heritage}, pages = {23 -- 41}, } @book{maynard_reversing_2000, address = {Melbourne}, title = {Reversing the negatives: a portrait of aboriginal {Victoria}}, isbn = {978-0-7311-5271-1}, shorttitle = {Reversing the negatives}, url = {https://cat2.lib.unimelb.edu.au:443/record=b2631198~S30}, publisher = {Museum Victoria}, author = {Maynard, Ricky and Birch, Tony}, year = {2000}, keywords = {Urban and cultural heritage}, }