'It was just you and your child': Single migrant mothers, generational storytelling and Australia's migrant heritage
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Dellios, Alexandra
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Sage Publications Inc
Abstract
On the 10 and 11 February 2016, former residents of one of Australia’s post-war ‘holding’ centres for migrant
arrivals presented evidence at a hearing for the site’s inclusion on the Victorian Heritage Register. They were
aware that the Victorian Heritage Register held few places of significance to post-war migrant communities,
let alone working migrant women, which Benalla largely accommodated. They chose to retell their mothers’
stories and explicitly expressed a desire to honour their mothers’ memory at this hearing. This article
will explore the impetus expressed by these former child migrants of Benalla to tell their mothers’ stories
and unpack its associated implications for the history and collective remembrance of Australia’s post-war
migrants. These former child migrants found a platform in the heritage hearing, a platform from which they
could piece together their mothers’ history and insist that it is a history worthy of heritage listing and public
acknowledgement. On a broad level, I ask, what can a contentious history like Benalla’s offer the history
of post-war migration in Australia? Specifically, what role do generational stories of single working migrant
women have in the remembering of migrant history and heritage practice in Australia?
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Memory Studies
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Restricted until
2099-12-31
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