Black Stories Matter

Black Stories Matter

The re-emergence of the Black Lives Matter movement has provoked a cultural reckoning about how Black stories are told and is creating new opportunities for the media to disrupt the patterns of the past. Black Stories Matter is an audio series made up of five groundbreaking conversations from media researchers, historians, former policy makers and Aboriginal journalists on how mainstream media has failed in its telling of Black stories. By understanding how the mainstream media has failed, we can also…

vector-2

Episodes

Chipping away at the fourth wall – fighting media silence and looking to the future

First Nations in Australia have had extraordinary patience in the face of extraordinary denial.  In the words of Yothu Yindi’s song, Treaty, Aboriginal people have repeatedly seen “promises can disappear just like writing in the sand.”  In this series we’ve talked about how the media has repeatedly failed Aboriginal political aspirations and how Australia's media landscape requires a transformation that needs to go much deeper than issues of representation.  In this episode of Black Stories Matter, we're going to be...

Independent Black Media on sovereignty and self determination

We know that bad reporting can lead to bad policy and this can adversely affect the lives of First Nations people.  So far in this series, we've heard how the Australian mainstream media has failed to connect with Aboriginal communities. But for Aboriginal journalists deeply embedded in their communities, it's a completely different story.  In this episode, we're looking to independent black media, to hear what Aboriginal journalists can teach us about the stories told around sovereignty and self determination...

A test we have always failed: A history of Aboriginal politics in the media

It was 1992, when Prime Minister Paul Keating spoke to the mostly Aboriginal crowd that had gathered in Redfern Park in inner city Sydney.  This was the first time a Prime Minister had spoken about the dispossession, violence and prejudice carried out against First Nations people in Australia.  It was a landmark moment in our history. And it put reconciliation firmly on the political agenda.  But 28 years after Keating gave his speech, we still haven't passed the test he...

Does the Media Fail Aboriginal Political Aspirations?

A white lens has distorted Black stories ever since Captain James Cook took possession of the continent now known as Australia and since that time the interests of settlers have dominated media reporting on Aboriginal people.  This matters because reporting shapes the way Aboriginal political worlds are understood and talked about and the storyteller is often the most powerful person in the room.  In the first of five landmark conversations we ask ‘Does the Media Fail Aboriginal Political Aspirations?’  This...

Introducing Black Stories Matter

Ever since Captain James Cook evaded British instructions to take possession of the continent now known as Australia “with the consent of the natives”, the interests of settlers have dominated media reporting on Aboriginal people.  This year, there’s been a global awakening. The events of 2020 including the Black Lives Matter movement and COVID-19 have challenged traditional narratives, creating new opportunities for how we tell stories, who tells them and what stories are told.  Black Stories Matter is a five-part...