Theme
Quotes
Poetic Techniques
Surprise
100

Name ONE theme 

1. Aboriginal Identity and Experience

2. The destructive nature of colonialism

100

“We are as strangers here now, but the white tribe are the ______.”

Strangers

100

The repeated phrase, 'We are Going' is an example of which technique?

Repetition

100

What is 'We are Going' about?

The poem is about Aboriginal people returning to their sacred land and seeing it destroyed by white settlement.

200

Which group of people does this poem criticise?

European settlers and colonisers 

200

Name ONE repeated line.

We are Going

200

Identify the simile in the poem

'White men hurry about like ants.'

200

What is Dreamtime?

The Dreamtime is the period in which life was created according to Aboriginal culture.

300

What theme is shown when traditional practices like corroborees and hunting are described as disappearing.

The destructive nature of colonialism

300
Find one example of personification
"We are the lightening bolt over Gaphembah Hill"


300

Where is imagery shown in the poem?

When it describes the loss of natural landscapes such as scrubs, sacred sites and hunting grounds.

300
Why did Noonuccal join the Australian Women's Army Service?

She joined after the capture and death of her two brothers.

400

What theme does this quote belong to: "We are the corroboree and the bora ground, We are the old ceremonies, the laws of the elders."


Aboriginal Identity and Experience

400

What effect does the repetition of 'We are Going' create in the poem?


It shows the gradual disappearance of Indigenous culture

400

Which poetic technique is shown when the poet lists traditional aspects of Aboriginal life (e.g., corroboree, hunting, and campfires)? 

Lisiting 

400

In what year was 'We are Going' published?

1964

500

Find evidence which shows the theme: The destructive nature of Colonialism

The scrubs are gone, the hunting and the laughter...And we are going

500

What does the quote, “We are as strangers here now," symbolise?

This quote symbolises how Aboriginal people have become outsiders in their own land.

500

What tone of the poem?

Mournful and haunting

500

What is Noonuccal remembered for?

She is primarily remembered as a pioneering Aboriginal poet,60s civil rights activist, environmentalist, and educator