Australian History and English
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Discuss the social justice issues that are evident in âTime is running outâ, âThen and Nowâ BY Oodgeroo Noonuccal and the visual text The Conciliationâ by Benjamin Duterrau, 1840 and âThe National Pictureâ by Geoff Parr, 1985 by referring to both the poetic and visual techniques used by composers.
Social justice is an essential form of justice in several societies. Social Justice involves the action of setting a system of laws established by the society itself, usually benefitting the people but a major problem stands clear in this concept. The system allows dominating figures such as government officials and groups to create these laws which put to disadvantage the people under these figures. This concept is evident in the texts âTime is running outâ and âThen and Nowâ by Oodgeroo Noonuccal and the theme is also apparent when comparing the two visual text âThe Conciliationâ by Benjamin Duterrau, 1840 and âThe National Pictureâ by Geoff Parr, 1985.
In the poem âThen and Nowâ the composer Oodgeroo Noonuccal states âIn my dreams I hear my tribe/Laughing as they hunt and swim/ But dreams are shattered by rushing carâ. In the first 2 lines of the first stanza she utilises positive diction âdreamâ and âlaughterâ this implies her desire to live an Aboriginal lifestyle and for it to be like it was before white colonisation. Continuing into the third line of the first stanza she states âBut dreams are shattered by rushing carâ her tone becomes harsh as she abruptly utilises negative diction such as âshatteredâ to describe her state of mind. Shattered means to break or cause to break suddenly and violently into pieces, which brings us to the theme of social justice. Before Europeans settled in Australia, Aboriginals had rights to their land and they were free. The settlement of the Europeans in Australia affected the Indigenous Australian population greatly as from the composerâs historical context we are able to understand that she had been subject to racial abuse during her schooling because of her ethnicity. During this time these actions where permitted as society created the laws. This continual abuse led the poet to leaving school at the young age of 13 and becoming a domestic maid. Social justice comes to play as the poet herself was an Indigenous Australian, and was ostracised due to her colour only because society had deemed it acceptable. The segregation of her kind led her to feel shattered as she states in the poem. Social injustice is present as the rightful owners of the land, were told to remove themselves again because society deemed it acceptable. The poet then further states in the third stanza âNo more play about/No more the old ways/âŠ/children of nature we were thenâ the continual repetition of âno moreâ emphasises on the fact that what she writes about is now the past, she then states âchildren of nature we were thenâ this refers to her cultural belief as being descendant to all living things on earth, she again reminds us that this was in the past by stating âthenâ. After settlement of Europeans, Aboriginal were not allowed to, practise their beliefs, alienating the many Aboriginals from their own culture and religion, in order to bring them to the âwhite waysâ by doing so many Aboriginals had lost almost all ties to their dream time, and the Europeans were able to succeed as society reasoned this acceptable. Social injustice is present as society and officials of the British Government accepted and allowed for the religious ties between the Aboriginals of the land to deteriorate, and considered it acceptable to ostracise and segregate on the basis of ethnicity.
Within the composition âTime is running outâ Oodgeroo Noonuccal formerly known as Kath Walker states âThe miner rapes/The heart of the earthâ utilising kinaesthetic imagery and negative diction ârapeâ to emphasise on the pain and the âemotional scarringâ that the earth has been through whilst personifying the