Blackfella
Blackfella (also blackfellah, blackfulla, black fella, or black fellah) is an informal term used in Australian English by Indigenous Australians, in particular Aboriginal Australians, to refer to themselves. It should be used with great care by white people, as it may be considered offensive by some.[1][2]
See also
- Black Australians (disambiguation)
- Blackfella Films, a film production company founded and run by Rachel Perkins
- Blackfellas, 1993 film adaptation of Archie Weller's 1981 novel The Day of the Dog
- Blackfella/Whitefella, a song by Warumpi Band, co-written by singer George Rrurrambu and guitarist Neil Murray.[3]
- Hori – a racial slur used for a person of Māori descent
- Indigenous Australians#Terms "black" and "blackfella"
- Koori, demonym used by Aboriginal people in Victoria and New South Wales
- List of Australian Aboriginal group names
- Redskin, a pejorative term for Native Americans in the United States
References
- "Appropriate Terminology, Indigenous Australian Peoples" (PDF). General Information Folio 5. Flinders University. Retrieved 14 June 2020 – via ipswich.gld.gov.au.
Information adapted from ‘Using the right words: appropriate terminology for Indigenous Australian studies’ 1996 in Teaching the Teachers: Indigenous Australian Studies for Primary Pre-Service Teacher Education. School of Teacher Education, University of New South Wales
- "Recommended Guidelines for Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Terminology" (PDF). Queensland University of Technology. 17 March 2015. Retrieved 14 June 2020.
- Bisley, Alexander (14 April 2015). "Blackfella/Whitefella by Warumpi Band – Australia's seminal reconciliation song". The Guardian. Retrieved 27 February 2018.
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