%0 Journal Article %T A reading of Husserl¡¯s ¡°life-world¡± against the loss of history in the context of postcolonial Aboriginal Australia. %A Carles Serra Pag¨¨s %J Coolabah %D 2009 %I %X Recently, Husserl¡¯s phenomenology of the ¡°life-world¡± has been givenspecial emphasis in those areas of the social sciences that are concerned with the crisisof values and meaning in our contemporary world. Husserl conceived the concept of¡°life-world¡± as a final introduction to his system of transcendental phenomenology, theproject of a lifetime. As Husserl puts it in The Crisis of the European Sciences andTranscendental Phenomenology (7), phenomenology is not only the act of ¡°senseinvestigation¡±(Besinnung), but also the universal ¡°coming to self-awareness¡±(Selbstbesinnung) of humanity in a reflective manner, and herein precisely lieshumanity¡¯s responsibility towards itself. Husserl expected phenomenology to be theultimate universal science, destined to ground all human achievements in the soil of the¡°life-world¡± (33-34). But can Husserl¡¯s phenomenology accomplish this task effectivelyoutside the horizon of Europe, and outside the context of a critique of modern scienceand technology? So as to try to answer this question, our aim will be to introduce somekey concepts and notions that characterize Husserl¡¯s phenomenology of the ¡°life-world¡±or philosophy of genesis in the context of Aboriginal identity in Australia. For thispurpose, we will offer a reading of Sally Morgan¡¯s My Place, an autobiographical novelwhich narrates the personal quest of a woman of Aboriginal descend to find her rootsand identity in a Westernized world. In the course of our analysis, we will describe inwhat ways some of Husserl¡¯s notions related to the life-world are hindered inpostcolonial contexts, and whether a phenomenological analysis can provide a means ofreconcilement. Finally, we will also ask ourselves about the possibility of aphenomenological idea of history that respects the idiosyncracies of historicity. %K Husserl %K Sally Morgan %K phenomenology %K lifeworld. %U http://www.ub.edu/dpfilsa/coola3cserra.pdf