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Women bashing: An urban Aboriginal perspective
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1995
Year
VictimologyIndigenous PeopleQueer TheoryVictimisationSocial SciencesViolence Against WomenGender StudiesAboriginal HomeAboriginal PeopleLateral ViolenceViolent CrimeGender-based ViolenceIntersectionalityIndigenous FeminismsFeminist TheoryPsychological ViolenceSociologyIndigenous StudiesDaily ViolenceUrban Aboriginal PerspectiveAggression
ABORIGINAL people in urbanised Australia experience violence on a daily basis. This violence ranges from the psychological (the covert hostility of the corner shop, the denial of the Aboriginality of fair-skinned or urban Blacks) through to the physical brutality of the criminal justice system. For Aboriginal women and children this daily violence is not only public but also has a private, B1ack-on-B1ack dimension. The Aboriginal home may be some refuge from the slights of white Australia but this is cold comfort to women for whom being 'flogged up' by their partners is so ordinary an event as to be unremarkable.