375,654 research outputs found
General French and staff, Colesberg, South Africa, 1901 /
Title devised by cataloguer from acquisition documentation and reference sources.; Part of the collection: Samuel Albert White photographs of South Australian Aboriginal people and the Boer War.; Inscriptions: "General French and staff, (little man on the right) it was really dark & his horse was very restive. Taken by S A White Cpt at Colesburg Sept 1901"--In pencil on reverse.; Also available online at: http://nla.gov.au/nla.pic-vn6447459-s37
M J D White and Sally White with S Makino
This record was harvested from a previous catalogue system and will be withdrawn in 2025. Information in this record may be superseded or incomplete. Visit this record in UMA's new catalogue at: https://archives.library.unimelb.edu.au/nodes/view/264210Inscription on verson: Dr & Mrs White, with best wishes of [signed] Sajiro[?] Makino, Jan. 17, 1976.
Series 1. File 1-46. Whites with S Makino 1976.jpg169886
Item: [1988.0042.00013] "M J D White and Sally White with S Makino
Australian troops in South Africa, approximately 1901, 2 /
Title devised by cataloguer from acquisition documentation and reference sources.; Part of the collection: Samuel Albert White photographs of South Australian Aboriginal people and the Boer War.; Also available online at: http://nla.gov.au/nla.pic-vn6447459-s25
Australian troops in South Africa, approximately 1901, 1 /
Title devised by cataloguer from acquisition documentation and reference sources.; Part of the collection: Samuel Albert White photographs of South Australian Aboriginal people and the Boer War.; Also available online at: http://nla.gov.au/nla.pic-vn6447459-s24
Portrait of an Arunta man /
Title devised by cataloguer from inscription and reference sources.; Part of the collection: Samuel Albert White photographs of South Australian Aboriginal people and the Boer War.; Condition: Yellowing and creases.; Also available online at: http://nla.gov.au/nla.pic-vn6447459-s52
Australian troops in South Africa, approximately 1901, 3 /
Title devised by cataloguer from acquisition documentation and reference sources.; Part of the collection: Samuel Albert White photographs of South Australian Aboriginal people and the Boer War.; Also available online at: http://nla.gov.au/nla.pic-vn6447459-s26
Aboriginal children at Alice Springs, Northern Territory /
Title devised by cataloguer from inscription and reference sources.; Inscription: "Half cast children at Alice Springs during the time Mrs had them in school."--In pencil on reverse.; Part of the collection: Samuel Albert White photographs of South Australian Aboriginal people and the Boer War.; Condition: Yellowing.; Also available online at: http://nla.gov.au/nla.pic-vn6447459-s57
Aboriginal girls carrying buckets on poles, Alice Springs, Northern Territory /
Title devised by cataloguer from inscription and reference sources.; Inscription: "Half casts at Alice Springs during the time Mrs had them"--In pencil on reverse.; Part of the collection: Samuel Albert White photographs of South Australian Aboriginal people and the Boer War.; Condition: Yellowing.; Also available online at: http://nla.gov.au/nla.pic-vn6447459-s58
The three prisoners as they came out of the gaol, Colesberg, South Africa, September, 1901 /
Title devised by cataloguer from inscription and reference sources.; Part of the collection: Samuel Albert White photographs of South Australian Aboriginal people and the Boer War.; Inscriptions: "The picture was taken just before No 2 showing? the three prisoners as they came out of the jaol (smi shot?). SAW Sept 1901."--In pencil on reverse.; Condition: Faded.; Also available online at: http://nla.gov.au/nla.pic-vn6447459-s1
The workshop as the work: white anti-racism organising in 1960s, 70s, and 80s US social movements
This thesis explores the rise of anti-racism workshops developed by white activists in various United States social movements from the late 1960s through the mid-1980s. The shifting ideology of the black freedom movement in the late 1960s, from integration to Black Power, transformed white activists‘ place within racial justice struggles. While recent scholarship has begun to turn its attention towards whites‘ ongoing racial justice activities, one of the most radical and widespread of these efforts is consistently overlooked: anti-racism workshops. Increasingly prevalent from the late 1960s through to the diversity-trainings explosion of the 1990s, this thesis demonstrates that these workshops had their roots in the black freedom, women‘s liberation and gay liberation movements. White activists from these movements led these workshops in order to examine white racial domination and privilege within both leftist social movements and larger US society.
Analysing case studies from the black freedom, women‘s liberation and gay liberation/rights movements, this thesis explores the foundational assumptions of anti-racism workshops. It seeks to explain how and why these efforts sought to frame race and racism as issues of knowledge and consciousness and why such efforts constituted radical praxis. It is argued that early anti-racism workshops were pedagogical projects that sought to confront the racial ignorance that structured the lives of whites in the US, including progressives and their liberation movements. This thesis draws attention to the efficacy and power of these workshops in terms of their epistemological effects, in the transformations they brought about in whites‘ understanding, or awareness, of racial realities
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