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The terms on which child abuse is made to matter: media representations of the Aurukun Case

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Author(s)
Due, C.
Riggs, D.

واصفات البيانات
عرض سجل المادة الكامل
URI
http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12424/3657750
Online Access
http://hdl.handle.net/2440/72874
Abstract
In 2007 the Australian mainstream news media extensively covered a child rape case in the Indigenous community of Aurukun. In this coverage, the media positioned themselves as having a moral requirement to report the ‘Aurukun rape case’ in order to bring issues of Indigenous child sexual abuse to the attention of the public. This paper examines the representations of this case made available by mainstream news media, and specifically examines both the depiction of Indigenous communities as dysfunctional and the claim made by the media that Indigenous child sexual abuse is ‘our business’. The paper concludes that the coverage of this case represents a form of ‘war porn’ that became more about white control over Indigenous lives and less an investigation into child sexual abuse.
Clemence Due and Damien W. Riggs
Date
2012
Type
Journal article
Identifier
oai:digital.library.adelaide.edu.au:2440/72874
Australian Feminist Studies, 2012; 27(71):3-18
0816-4649
1465-3303
http://hdl.handle.net/2440/72874
0020118194
10.1080/08164649.2012.648256
24982
Copyright/License
© 2012 Taylor & Francis
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