![]() Godwell, ‘The Olympic Branding of Aborigines’. Knight et al., ‘The Disappointment Games’. Cathy Freeman’s daughter turns heads at school athletics event with blistering run Staff Writers from September 8th, 2022 8:37 am The daughter of Australian sporting icon Cathy Freeman is following in her mother’s footsteps, turning heads during a school athletics event a local Murrumbeena athletics track. Meekison, ‘Whose Ceremony is it Anyway?’ Schaffer and Smith, ‘The Olympics of the Everyday’ Godwell, ‘The Olympic Branding of Aborigines’. Cathy Freeman provides students with biographical information about an Aboriginal Australian athlete who used her success to bring attention to the. Larson and Park, Global Television and the Politics of the Seoul Olympics de Moragas Spa et al., Television in the Olympics. Downing and Husband, Representing ‘Race’, 129. de Costa, New Relationships, Old Certainties. Bruce and Hallinan, ‘Cathy Freeman’ Hartley and McKee, The Indigenous Public Sphere Wensing and Bruce, ‘Bending the Rules’. Bruce and Hallinan, ‘Cathy Freeman’ Tatz, Aborigines in Sport Obstacle Race. ![]() Hartley and McKee, The Indigenous Public Sphere, 6. Hartmann, Race, Culture and the Revolt of the Black Athlete. Nonetheless, neither network saw Freeman's identity in openly critical terms: in Freeman's Olympic narrative sport and politics were allowed to mix in a relatively unproblematic way. The corollary of this was that the English-language coverage paid greater attention to the substance of Aboriginal grievances and struggle. The English-language coverage emphasized the ambivalent nature of her role. Freeman, 50, offloaded the property in 2006. Located in Kew, 7.6km from the CBD, the five-bedroom, four-bathroom home has been listed with a price guide of between 3.8million and 4.1million. The analysis generally conforms the hypothesis that the normative dimension of these expectations would be accentuated more in the French- than English-language coverage, and this resulted in a more consistently affirmative portrayal of Freeman and her performance. A two-storey Melbourne mansion that was once owned by Olympian Cathy Freeman will go under the hammer on March 11. ![]() Freeman has used her sporting success to signify visibly and with some controversy her identification with political Aboriginality and reconciliation, and she went into the 2000 games bearing an unusual weight of expectation, intensified by being chosen to light the Olympic cauldron, that a victory in the 400 metres would mark symbolically reconciliation between Aboriginal and non-Aboriginal Australians. Catherine Cathy Freeman is an Australian former sprinter, who specialised in the 400 metres event. ![]() The specific focus of the analysis is the representation of Freeman's political identity as an agent and symbol of Aboriginal reconciliation – the struggle for apology, reparatio, and social justice in the light of the history and legacy of colonial oppression and exclusion. This paper compares French- and English-language Canadian television coverage of Australian Aboriginal athlete Cathy Freeman during the 2000 Olympics using a narrative framework. ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |