Commemorating Stolen Generation experiences through virtual reality

Author:

Tiwari Reena1,Stephens John Richard1ORCID,Scott (Noongar) Kim John1,Parnell Renee1,Morrison (Minang) James1,Hussein Fatmaelzahraa Fekry Mohamed2

Affiliation:

1. Curtin University, Australia

2. Department of Geography and Urban Sustainability, College of Humanities & Social Sciences, United Arab Emirates University, United Arab Emirates

Abstract

State sanctioned removal of Australian Aboriginal children from family, culture, and country has had harmful and traumatic effects on the Survivors of this process and their children. Known as the Stolen Generations, children were detained in government settlements and church missions and stripped of Aboriginality. This article explores ways that a virtual reality reconstruction of mission environments may be implemented to memorialise and commemorate Survivor experience that avoid narratives of victimhood and destructive post-colonial overlays on their stories of survival. Our project is to develop a virtual reality model of Carrolup-Marribank Mission in Western Australia as a living digital memorial for use by Survivors and their families to help address their displacement and loss of culture and identity. This article shows how virtual reality may be a potent didactic tool to convey difficult histories as well as a purveyor of powerful stories that contest stereotyped perceptions of Aboriginal people.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Reference42 articles.

1. Archibald L. (2006). Decolonization and healing: Indigenous experiences in the United States, New Zealand, Australia and Greenland. Aboriginal Healing Foundation. https://www.cwis.org/document/decolonization-and-healing-indigenous-experiences-in-the-united-states-new-zealand-australia-and-greenland/

2. Commemoration as Witnessing: 20 Years of Remembering the Stolen Generations at Colebrook Reconciliation Park

3. Australian Institute of Health and Welfare. (2016). Australian burden of disease study: Impact and causes of illness and death in Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people 2011. https://www.aihw.gov.au/reports/burden-of-disease/illness-death-indigenous-australians/summary

4. Australian Institute of Health and Welfare. (2021). Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Stolen Generations aged 50 and over: Updated analyses for 2018–19. https://healingfoundation.org.au/stolen-generations/stolengenerationsreport

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