Introducing ‘Straight Up Islander’, a celebration of writers of Oceania – SBS

Aside from First Nations people of so-called Australia, we are all descendants of migrants. Migration to move from one place to another has a deep meaning and history to those who identify with the many island groups and oceanways of the South Pacific. In a colonial context, we are known as Pacific Islanders a term which was first used in 1785 to refer to those who were native to Polynesia, Melanesia and/or Micronesia. Much like how Australia is a term forced upon First Nations people, Pacific Islander is not a term we chose for ourselves. It certainly was not a term which came from the voyagers who used t (time) and v (space) to navigate between islands and oceanways now known as Tonga, Smoa, Fiji, Aotearoa, Tokelau, Hawaii, Tahiti, Kiribati, Niue, Tuvalu, Vanuatu, West Papua, Torres Strait Islands and more.

Straight Up Islander is a collection of articles which reflect the ancestral and colonial history, nuances, intersections and short-comings of the term Pacific Islander, recognising our personal, political and geographical relationships to so-called Australia. Straight Up Islander acts as a reclamation, an extension and a celebration of who we are, where we came from and how we want to be.

Together, their stories showcase the mana (strong spirit) of the complicated identities of Islander

This collection is broken into two parts (the second instalment coming later in 2021) each of which feature five awe-inspiring writers who have either migrated from the smaller islands of the South Pacific Ocean or identify with those islands and oceanways because of their specific ancestry and heritage. Together, their stories showcase the mana (strong spirit) of the complicated identities of Islander in so-called Australia. The writers bear witness to the ancient and modern narratives of our ancestral history, how to heal trauma, the unique ways in which COVID19 has changed our cultures, the localised forms of migration that we make as indigenous settlers across Aboriginal lands, how we find ourselves blended between cultures within and outside the South Pacific, and the ways in which being Indigenous, being Islander and being Black can intersect. These articles also uplift our understanding of ancient South Pacific art methods, which clash and blend with Western artforms; they extend our definitions of Islander, especially in regards to the Fijian-Indian community; they mould our ancient practices into modern ones; and they empower us to speak of the tapus (taboos) in our cultures.

Editor of 'Straight Up Islander', Winnie Dunn. Source: Sweatshop Western Sydney Literacy Movement

To accompany these powerful and diverse pieces of writing, Straight Up Islander also features a striking and vivid new image produced by the incredible Tori-Jay Mordey, a First Nations illustrator and artist with Torres Strait Islander and English heritage. Ml aupito!

I hope these stories bring from margin to centre the voices of communities in so-called Australia that are so often left to the wayside. To my fellow Islanders, I hope these stories reveal new ways we can know each other. To my fellow migrants, I hope these stories reveal new ways of knowing us. And to the First Nations people who host us, on whose lands we are guests, I hope these stories reveal how humbled we are by your sovereignty which was never ceded.

Winnie Dunn is the general manager of Sweatshop Western Sydney Literacy Movement, and guest editor of SBS Voices'Straight Up Islander series, showcasing the work of writers with ancestralties across Oceania.

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Introducing 'Straight Up Islander', a celebration of writers of Oceania - SBS

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