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Histories have formed and transformed the lands, peoples and nations of Oceania, from the Pacific Islands, New Guinea and Aotearoa/New Zealand to Australia. While colonial powers crafted historical narratives of entitlement, First Nations peoples have long made history, living on their Country far longer than the colonial invaders. In Deep History, edited by Ann McGrath and Jackie Huggins, leading historians and thinkers explore Indigenous histories of caring for places and people over millennia. With contributions from Brenda L Croft, Anna Clark, Lynette Russell and many more, Deep History considers how stories of the past and the future are inscribed on land, waterways and skies. 'Deep History is a rousing insurrection against the continuing colonial policing of history in Australasia and the Pacific. Indigenous Australian and Pasifika scholars lead in the reframing of our historical narratives, recognising, alongside white scholars, the urgency of truth telling for respectful acknowledgement of First Nations sovereignty. This postcolonial reframing of the space and tempo of past legacies and contemporary trajectories offers us new and deeper histories for better futures. ' Warwick Anderson, author of The Cultivation of Whiteness: Science, Health, and Racial Destiny in Australia 'Deep History attempts the timely, diffcult, and often discomforting task of blasting open the allied academic disciplines of History and Archaeology to Indigenous ways of representing the past and their sovereign sense of Deep Time. Going beyond the peaceful co-existence models of what was once called bi-cultural history in Aotearoa New Zealand and drawing on experiences of settler-colonial rule in the wider world of Oceania, the essays here experiment with a variety of creative strategies to take this challenging conversation forward. The result is an exciting and courageous volume that will speak to all students of decolonisation of knowledge.' Dipesh Chakrabarty, author of Provincializing Europe: Postcolonial Thought and Historical Difference 'This wonderful collection of essays displaying the challenges and achievements of Deep History, draws our attention to historys power, for good and ill, and its importance to the sovereignty of a people. From a rich and thought-provoking introduction to the series of exciting, informative, and well-written essays that follow we learn much about the very di?erent forms deep history can take a long walk, rock art, stories and practices that nourish Country, scientific studies of changes in land and sea, works of historical fiction, and even the conventional historical archive. I came away with a heightened appreciation of the different ways that Indigenous and non-Indigenous histories can and sometimes do communicate with one another, and the vital importance of doing so. ' Ann Curthoys, co-author of Taking Liberty: Indigenous Rights and Settler Self-Government in Colonial Australia, 1830 - 1890 'Deep History: Country and Sovereignty has the capacity to open so many new eyes to the profound timelessness of Indigenous history and how it is embedded everywhere in the land, seas and skies that surround us. It adds new understanding to the connection between the everywhen and human and spiritual experience. It is a gift to the children and grandchildren of settler societies.' Paul Daley, author of Jesustown and Guardian writer 'A powerful collection of connections to history, Country and culture — offering new insights every Australian should read.' Terri Janke, author of True Tracks: Respecting Indigenous knowledge and culture, |