Fringe dwellers explained

The term fringe dwellers has been used in Australia to describe groups of Aboriginal Australians who camp on the outskirts of towns and cities, from which they have become excluded, generally through law or land alienation as a result of colonisation.[1] In Adelaide, South Australia, the term was applied particularly in the early days of settlement to those who camped in the Adelaide park lands around the city centre.[2]

Fringe dwellers are also referred to as "Long Grassers" in contemporary times, especially in Northern Australia where year-long warm weather conditions allow itinerant Aborigines to live indefinitely on the outskirts of towns without official places of residence.[3]

The term was used for the 1961 novel The Fringe Dwellers by Western Australian author Nene Gare.[4] That book was adapted as the 1986 Australian film The Fringe Dwellers, directed by Bruce Beresford.

See also

Notes and References

  1. News: SBS News . Death of a fringe dweller: the last ripples of colonisation in Australia. 8 August 2014. ...originally published in The Guardian. Photographer: Andrew Quilty; Journalist/Producer: Fanou Filali; Video editor: Rowan Tucker-Evans; Narrator: Dan Wylie. Simon. Quilty. 14 August 2019.
  2. Web site: Adelaidia. Poltpalingada Booboorowie. 14 August 2019.
  3. Web site: Buttigieg. Paul. Aboriginal Death. paulospeom.com. 29 September 2015. 9 May 2021. https://web.archive.org/web/20210509021414/https://www.paolospoems.com/aboriginal-poems/aboriginal-death-2/. dead.
  4. Nene Gare, The Fringe Dwellers, Sun Books, Melbourne, 1966 (first published by Heinemann, London, 1961)