Who is Telling ‘Australian’ Stories? The Results from the First Nations and People of Colour Writers Count

IF 0.1 4区 文学 0 LANGUAGE & LINGUISTICS Journal of Language Literature and Culture Pub Date : 2022-09-02 DOI:10.1080/20512856.2022.2160250
Natalie Kon-yu, Emily Booth
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

ABSTRACT The Australian Publishing Industry has long been critiqued for its lack of diverse voices. In Australia movements such as Voices From the Intersection and The Stella Diversity Survey have been aimed at bringing an awareness of this lack to a larger audience, while festivals such as Blak and Bright, and awards such as The Next Chapter, have sought to highlight the works of authors who identify as First Nations or as Writers of Colour. The study discussed in this paper is the first large-scale study that sought to identify how culturally diverse the author cohort was in the study year of 2018. The First Nations and People of Colour Writers Count (henceforth FNPOC Writers Count) sought to identify the publication rate of books in 2018 that were by Australian authors who publicly identified as First Nations people or People of Colour. The purpose of the project was to develop the first large-scale numerical dataset that illustrated the inequity in Australia’s publishing industry that has been anecdotally observed for many years.
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谁在讲“澳大利亚”故事?来自第一民族和有色人种作家的结果
长期以来,澳大利亚出版业一直因缺乏多样化的声音而受到批评。在澳大利亚,“来自十字路口的声音”和“斯特拉多样性调查”等运动旨在让更多的观众意识到这一缺陷,而“布莱克与光明”等节日和“下一章”等奖项则试图突出那些认为自己是第一民族或有色人种作家的作品。本文中讨论的研究是第一个大规模研究,旨在确定作者队列在2018年研究年度的文化多样性。“第一民族和有色人种作家统计”(以下简称“FNPOC作家统计”)旨在确定2018年公开自称为第一民族或有色人种的澳大利亚作家的图书出版率。该项目的目的是开发第一个大规模的数字数据集,以说明澳大利亚出版业的不平等现象,这种不平等现象已经被观察了很多年。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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CiteScore
0.30
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发文量
2
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