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    Drobisch (Klaus) Fischer (Gerhard) éd Ihr Gewissen gebot es

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    Hartweg Frédéric. Drobisch (Klaus) Fischer (Gerhard) éd Ihr Gewissen gebot es. In: Archives de sciences sociales des religions, n°55/2, 1983. p. 224

    Drobisch (Klaus) Fischer (Gerhard) éd Ihr Gewissen gebot es

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    Hartweg Frédéric. Drobisch (Klaus) Fischer (Gerhard) éd Ihr Gewissen gebot es. In: Archives de sciences sociales des religions, n°55/2, 1983. p. 224

    Mudrooroo (1938 – 2019)

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    The chapter traces the events leading to the exclusion of Mudrooroo from the circle of Indigenous Australian authors, resulting in the erasure of the previously celebrated writer and critic from scholarly discourse, and eventually in the cancellation of his life work from the country’s institutions of cultural memory. The intervention of a local Aboriginal organisation to reject Mudrooroo’s claim to Indigenous ancestry was widely regarded as a final verdict of the ‘community’, paving the way for Aboriginal writer Anita Heiss to suppress his name in influential anthologies and websites, edited by Heiss during her brief career as an academic. Similarly, Irish-Australian Maureen Clark published a Ph. D. thesis and a series of articles aimed at delegitimizing Mudrooroo’s literary work that found a receptive scholarly audience. Clark explains Mudrooroo’s meeting with his mentor Mary Durack as a key to his career: he supposedly “negotiated” his Aboriginal identity in dialogue with Durack, with both “involved in a conscious act of complicity”. Heiss’ and Clark’s writings are equally characterized by an essentialist understanding of Aboriginality based solely on bloodline, as well as duplicitous scholarship and a wilful disregard of Mudrooroo’s complex personality and the unconventional trajectory of his life story

    Mudrooroo (1938 – 2019)

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    Nearly thirty years ago, the work of Mudrooroo, a writer who had been celebrated previously as Australia’s foremost Black novelist, poet and critic, was publicly cancelled amid a scandal regarding his Indigenous credentials. Today, his vast literary estate, deposited mainly in the National Library of Australia and the State Library of Western Australia, is available to researchers but remains unexplored, his important contribution to Australian literature largely forgotten. The study of the estate adds important new insights into Mudrooroo’s life and work; it reveals the existence of a corpus of dramatic works, hitherto largely unknown, as well as extensive writings while in exile after 2001, including a partially completed six-volume autobiography. The private papers confirm a stream of misogyny in his private life that scholars had already detected in his fiction, adding biographical details to the history of his five marriages. The most impressive section of the estate is the comprehensive collection of diaries that allow a nearly daily view of Mudrooroo’s Tibetan exile, ending with reflections on his long battle against terminal cancer only a few days before his death

    Fischer (Gerhard) ed. "With the Sharpened Axe of Reason". Approaches to Walter Benjamin

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    Löwy Michael. Fischer (Gerhard) ed. "With the Sharpened Axe of Reason". Approaches to Walter Benjamin. In: Archives de sciences sociales des religions, n°102, 1998. pp. 113-114

    Holl (Adolf) Fischer (Gerhard) Kirche auf Distanz. Eine Religionpsychologische Untersuchung über die Einstellung österreicher Soldaten zu Kirche und Religion

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    Maître Jacques. Holl (Adolf) Fischer (Gerhard) Kirche auf Distanz. Eine Religionpsychologische Untersuchung über die Einstellung österreicher Soldaten zu Kirche und Religion. In: Archives de sociologie des religions, n°33, 1972. p. 253
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