Place-makers of the mind: Symbolic reconstruction of any inner city park

In 2016, a specialist unit of study that teaches university journalism students how to report in partnership with Indigenous community organisations extended its story range to an exclusive news feature produced in collaboration with members of the wider Nyoongar community of Perth, Western Australi...

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Main Authors: Thomson, Chris, Mason, B.
Format: Journal Article
Published: Pacific Media Centre, AUT 2016
Online Access:https://pjreview.aut.ac.nz/volume-22/issue-2
http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/17855
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author Thomson, Chris
Mason, B.
author_facet Thomson, Chris
Mason, B.
author_sort Thomson, Chris
building Curtin Institutional Repository
collection Online Access
description In 2016, a specialist unit of study that teaches university journalism students how to report in partnership with Indigenous community organisations extended its story range to an exclusive news feature produced in collaboration with members of the wider Nyoongar community of Perth, Western Australia. The story asked and answered the question of what happened to a stalled proposal to co-badge a major inner city park with a Nyoongar name. In conceiving the story, and producing it with assistance from our students, we intervened to achieve clarity on a local government decision where due process had not been followed. With the help of Nyoongar sources, we sought to explain the cultural importance of the park, and raise awareness of the decolonising potential of Indigenous place names. The story is appended after an exegesis that melds sense of place theory with Bourdieusian field theory to situate the story and its producers in social space.
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institution Curtin University Malaysia
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last_indexed 2025-11-14T07:23:10Z
publishDate 2016
publisher Pacific Media Centre, AUT
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spelling curtin-20.500.11937-178552025-05-12T03:54:52Z Place-makers of the mind: Symbolic reconstruction of any inner city park Thomson, Chris Mason, B. In 2016, a specialist unit of study that teaches university journalism students how to report in partnership with Indigenous community organisations extended its story range to an exclusive news feature produced in collaboration with members of the wider Nyoongar community of Perth, Western Australia. The story asked and answered the question of what happened to a stalled proposal to co-badge a major inner city park with a Nyoongar name. In conceiving the story, and producing it with assistance from our students, we intervened to achieve clarity on a local government decision where due process had not been followed. With the help of Nyoongar sources, we sought to explain the cultural importance of the park, and raise awareness of the decolonising potential of Indigenous place names. The story is appended after an exegesis that melds sense of place theory with Bourdieusian field theory to situate the story and its producers in social space. 2016 Journal Article http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/17855 https://pjreview.aut.ac.nz/volume-22/issue-2 https://ojs.aut.ac.nz/pacific-journalism-review/article/view/37 Pacific Media Centre, AUT fulltext
spellingShingle Thomson, Chris
Mason, B.
Place-makers of the mind: Symbolic reconstruction of any inner city park
title Place-makers of the mind: Symbolic reconstruction of any inner city park
title_full Place-makers of the mind: Symbolic reconstruction of any inner city park
title_fullStr Place-makers of the mind: Symbolic reconstruction of any inner city park
title_full_unstemmed Place-makers of the mind: Symbolic reconstruction of any inner city park
title_short Place-makers of the mind: Symbolic reconstruction of any inner city park
title_sort place-makers of the mind: symbolic reconstruction of any inner city park
url https://pjreview.aut.ac.nz/volume-22/issue-2
https://pjreview.aut.ac.nz/volume-22/issue-2
http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/17855