Whilst it is the heinous acts of physical violence that are often foregrounded when imagining frontier violence, it is the structural forces of colonialism that have had a continued effect on Aboriginal culture and identity. This essay will discuss the legitimacy of Patrick Wolfe’s logic of elimination in the face of frontier violence, examining the more insidious ways in which colonialism manifests itself in modern Australia.Keywordssettler colonialism; frontier violence; Indigenous dispossessio
Fear of Aboriginal aggression was a reality for the early settlers of New South Wales and Van Diemen...
While colonialism in Australia has ‘officially’ ended, it is evident that its impact on Indigenous p...
Since colonisation, history has been whitewashed to suit the socio-political aims of the settler. Th...
Subjectivity coded in Indigenous and non-Indigenous minds maintains a fictional spectre of Aborigina...
This essay examines the complex geographical, economic and political motivations that have resulted ...
This essay argues that Australia, while having made some substantive progress in the social and poli...
This paper explores the applicability of the term genocide to Australian colonisation, and considers...
White settlement of Australia began a process whereby the Aboriginal people who had settled the Aust...
Between Indigenous sovereignty and settler colonisation lie contested frontiers. I suggest Australia...
This article explores the strengths and limitations of settler colonial theory (SCT) as a tool for n...
Throughout its short history, colonial Australia has suffered from a severe anxiety surrounding its ...
Drawing on Alexis Wright’s novel The Swan Book and Irene Watson’s expansive critique of Australian l...
During the first century of Australia's colonization, settler thanatopolitics meant both casual kill...
This article considers whether Australia can accurately be described as a post-colonial nation, and ...
Recounts of Aboriginal Australian history stand as a jarring reminder of the dissonance at the heart...
Fear of Aboriginal aggression was a reality for the early settlers of New South Wales and Van Diemen...
While colonialism in Australia has ‘officially’ ended, it is evident that its impact on Indigenous p...
Since colonisation, history has been whitewashed to suit the socio-political aims of the settler. Th...
Subjectivity coded in Indigenous and non-Indigenous minds maintains a fictional spectre of Aborigina...
This essay examines the complex geographical, economic and political motivations that have resulted ...
This essay argues that Australia, while having made some substantive progress in the social and poli...
This paper explores the applicability of the term genocide to Australian colonisation, and considers...
White settlement of Australia began a process whereby the Aboriginal people who had settled the Aust...
Between Indigenous sovereignty and settler colonisation lie contested frontiers. I suggest Australia...
This article explores the strengths and limitations of settler colonial theory (SCT) as a tool for n...
Throughout its short history, colonial Australia has suffered from a severe anxiety surrounding its ...
Drawing on Alexis Wright’s novel The Swan Book and Irene Watson’s expansive critique of Australian l...
During the first century of Australia's colonization, settler thanatopolitics meant both casual kill...
This article considers whether Australia can accurately be described as a post-colonial nation, and ...
Recounts of Aboriginal Australian history stand as a jarring reminder of the dissonance at the heart...
Fear of Aboriginal aggression was a reality for the early settlers of New South Wales and Van Diemen...
While colonialism in Australia has ‘officially’ ended, it is evident that its impact on Indigenous p...
Since colonisation, history has been whitewashed to suit the socio-political aims of the settler. Th...