Dados Bibliográficos

AUTOR(ES) Bryan Mukandi , David Singh , Karla Brady , Jon Willis , Tanya Sinha , Deborah Askew , Chelsea Bond
ANO 2019
TIPO Book
PERIÓDICO Evidence-based Complementary and Alternative Medicine
ISSN 1741-427X
E-ISSN 1741-4288
EDITORA Hindawi
DOI 10.1177/1177180119876721
ADICIONADO EM 2025-08-14
MD5 EBFDBCF689E8122320E82590255971C7
MD5 EFCB557E2AE8DF6E43BABF5706C1ECBC
MD5 414B0B76397472D650FB082F415CBAE5
MD5 3792164013665BE5A753177FC4EBB134
MD5 79E3B8DBB81F9289CD2E439D5562C99C
MD5 6055054985F14AE87457A19F6CFAF5AE
MD5 C1991672FA4A5019A30D7A2B5E752F3A
MD5 DE7D22E629C438D544B0EC3E07B75327
MD5 2234CAE6CDF5AFE730C81C2F953A2FA4
MD5 f8d169d5ae791d3e50007bb02f1b2d68

Resumo

There is a growing literature on Indigenous masculinities written by scholars in North America, Hawai'i and New Zealand which draws on a variety of approaches. While there are signs of scholarly interest in Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander masculinities in Australia, this has yet to translate into a distinct body of work. This article is a potential opening onto such a future corpus, foregrounding and privileging how Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander men understand themselves. Interviews with 13 men, ranging in age from young teenagers through to Elders—among whom were Traditional Owners, school pupils, university students, community workers, health professionals and retirees—yielded a conception of Indigenous masculinities not concerned with recovering a lost masculinity. Rather, what was presented to us is a distinct conception of Indigenous masculinities rooted in place; a relationality motivated by an intergenerational sense of responsibility; a nuanced idea of 'acting hard.'

Ferramentas