Truganini by Cassandra Pybus
Cassandra Pybus’s Truganini tells the story of a journey full of deception and dead ends as George Augustus Robinson, ‘Protector of Aboriginals’, leads a group of Indigenous survivors from Lunawanna-alonnah around lutruwita on a mission of ‘conciliation’, which turns into an ill-fated scheme of deceit and control.
Pybus vividly paints Truganini (erroneously called the ‘last Tasmanian Aboriginal person’) as a bold, capable woman trying to manage her destiny while her people, culture and lands are destroyed. Truganini and her companions navigate the apocalyptic landscape of Tasmanian colonial genocide, where within a single generation many Tasmanian Aboriginal people living traditional lifestyles were either killed by colonists or kidnapped by Robinson and concentrated on Flinders Island.
Truganini, Wurati, Manalakina and other survivors bolt themselves to Robinson because he affords them the opportunity to continue to practice traditional culture, where all around them that culture is being violently suppressed. Robinson is dependent on his guides while in the bush, and is invited to partake in ceremony and To inducted into a traditional way of life. Robinson never fully accepts this invitation, and in the end betrays the people whose trust he needed for his mission of ‘conciliation’.
The real power of the book is its attempt to show, through Truganini’s eyes, the interaction between two cultures: one obsessed with extraction, status, and wealth; and the other defined by reciprocity, interconnectedness, and placedness. It’s a bleak history, and one many white Australians have difficulty swallowing, but it’s only through honest and emotionally sensitive engagement that white Australia can even begin to truly reconcile its genocidal past. Moreover, the book shows Truganini as a woman living her life on her own terms, not merely as a passive victim of an inevitable history.
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