The Story of Australia: Indigenous Worlds and Colonial Expansion
Fexingo History · Oceania
The Story of Australia: Indigenous Worlds and Colonial Expansion
From the Dreamtime to Federation, Australia’s story is one of profound transformation. Lucas and Luna trace the continent’s ancient Indigenous worlds — the Songlines, the 60,000-year-old cultures of the Yolngu, the Noongar, and the Kulin nations — and the cataclysmic arrival of the British in 1788. This show explores the frontier wars like the Eureka Stockade and the Myall Creek Massacre, the gold rushes that reshaped society, and the forced removal of Indigenous children known as the Stolen Generations. It delves into the rise of the penal colony at Botany Bay, the exploration of the outback by Burke and Wills, and the political journey toward the Constitution of 1901, which excluded Indigenous Australians. The show also examines contemporary reckonings: the Uluru Statement from the Heart, the debate over the date of Australia Day, and the ongoing fight for treaty and truth-telling. Why does a nation built on migration and dispossession still struggle with its own history? Through deep dives into the Western Desert art movement, the legacy of Captain Cook, and the environmental impact of European farming, Lucas and Luna reveal the layers beneath the sunburnt country. This is not a simple narrative of progress — it’s a contested, painful, and resilient story that continues to shape Australia today.