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Auntie Rita is a poignant memoir co-authored by Rita Huggins and her daughter Jackie Huggins, detailing the life and struggles of an Aboriginal woman in Australia. The book provides an intimate look at Rita's experiences with racism and her enduring spirit as she navigates the challenges of being visibly Aboriginal. It highlights her resilience and determination, as well as her impact on both her family and the broader Aboriginal community. The memoir also explores the historical context of show more Aboriginal life in Australia, contributing significantly to Indigenous literary studies and offering a voice to stories often suppressed under colonization. This revised edition continues to inspire new generations with its powerful narrative of love, strength, and cultural pride. show less

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3 reviews
(This review will contain mention of Aboriginal people who are or may be deceased).

I read this when I was at university and studying Aboriginal Political History.

I really liked it, but as always I think having to break it down and write about it and write an essay about it changed my perspective on it.

It's interesting to me that the author and the person who the book is being written about, Auntie Rita, are both sort of characters and narrators? It's a very interesting idea because these women are taking up multiple different spaces in time and place, and they're alright with that.

It's a humble little book. Feels much like a diary, or a very long letter. It was an easy read for me and pretty accessible and domestic as far as books show more go. Although I feel like there was something missing from it in general?

So I'll give it 3 stars, even though that's a totally arbitrary rating when it comes to someone else's personal story.
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Auntie Rita is the autobiography of an Aboriginal Australian women, Rita Huggins, written in dialogue with her daughter, Jackie Huggins, a university professor. Read for the Australian Women Writers Challenge.

Working together, Jackie and Rita Huggins create a full account of Rita’s life. Rita is the primary narrator, telling her story in her own style and words. Jackie, a college professor specializing in Aboriginal issues, inserts comments. Sometimes she fills in useful history to give readers an overall context for Rita’s life. Sometimes she gives another interpretation to her mother’s account, for example, trying to relieve her mother’s guilts. Sometimes, the two “fight with their tongues,” disagreeing but allowing the show more other to be heard. Jackie explains that the use of both their voices in the book means that she is not speaking “for her mother but to her, with her, and about her.”

Read more on my blog: me, you and books
http://mdbrady.wordpress.com/2012/02/21/auntie-rita-by-rita-huggins-and-jackie-h...
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Rita Huggins was stolen from her country as a child in the 1920s, and taken to what was then the Cherbourg Aboriginal Reserve. From that time, and also from the years as a single mother in Brisbane in the 1960s, Rita had the desire to make something better for herself, her family, and the Aboriginal people.

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4+ Works 79 Members
1+ Work 42 Members

Awards and Honors

Classifications

Genres
Biography & Memoir, Nonfiction, History
DDC/MDS
994.0049915History & geographyOceania & Polar RegionsAustralia
LCC
DU123.82 .H83History of Europe, Asia, Africa and OceaniaOceania (South Seas)History of Oceania (South Seas)AustraliaEthnography
BISAC

Statistics

Members
42
Popularity
703,220
Reviews
3
Rating
½ (3.50)
Languages
English
Media
Paper, Ebook
ISBNs
6
ASINs
1