Through a close reading of Kim Scott's Benang: from the heart, this thesis interrogates what whiteness in an Australian colonial context looks like from an Aboriginal perspective. Its central proposition is that Scott's narrator, Harley, discovers whiteness as a consequence of discovering his Aboriginality. It suggests whiteness is imbued with a power that arises through its invisibility and its ability to racialise and circumscribe non-white others. When this process is reversed, and whiteness is made visible, its power is diminished. Harley (re)places whiteness into an Aboriginal paradigm from within which he imagines a syncretic future for Australia
People of colour are often expected to meet externally determined standards of whiteness in exchange...
This thesis is an analysis of the production of assimilation discourse, in terms of Aboriginal peopl...
The articles in this special themed section were submitted by presenters at the Australian Critical ...
Through a close reading of Kim Scott's Benang: from the heart, this thesis interrogates what whiten...
The paper looks at some of the narrative strategies used by Aboriginal novelist Kim Scott in Benang,...
This article is interested in issues of reading and interpreting Indigenous Australian literature wi...
International audienceThe contributors to this volume repeatedly point to the pain endured by those ...
This thesis argues that, in Indigenous Australian Kim Scott’s novel Benang: from the heart (1999), i...
This article explores my coming-to-consciousness and dismantling of whiteness – of white privilege a...
[Excerpt]: This chapter draws on recent trends in Australian literary criticism to scan new horizon...
Submitted in (partial) fulfilment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy, Macqua...
Nineteenth-century Victorian travellers in Northeast Asia were consistently captivated by the Ainu p...
Damien W. Riggs and Barbara BairdIntroduction: The racial politics of bodies, nations, and knowledge...
Colonization created upheavals around the world. The worlds of Native Americans, Australian Aborigin...
Encoding Vision, Envisioning Race explores the social constructions of vision and the processes by w...
People of colour are often expected to meet externally determined standards of whiteness in exchange...
This thesis is an analysis of the production of assimilation discourse, in terms of Aboriginal peopl...
The articles in this special themed section were submitted by presenters at the Australian Critical ...
Through a close reading of Kim Scott's Benang: from the heart, this thesis interrogates what whiten...
The paper looks at some of the narrative strategies used by Aboriginal novelist Kim Scott in Benang,...
This article is interested in issues of reading and interpreting Indigenous Australian literature wi...
International audienceThe contributors to this volume repeatedly point to the pain endured by those ...
This thesis argues that, in Indigenous Australian Kim Scott’s novel Benang: from the heart (1999), i...
This article explores my coming-to-consciousness and dismantling of whiteness – of white privilege a...
[Excerpt]: This chapter draws on recent trends in Australian literary criticism to scan new horizon...
Submitted in (partial) fulfilment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy, Macqua...
Nineteenth-century Victorian travellers in Northeast Asia were consistently captivated by the Ainu p...
Damien W. Riggs and Barbara BairdIntroduction: The racial politics of bodies, nations, and knowledge...
Colonization created upheavals around the world. The worlds of Native Americans, Australian Aborigin...
Encoding Vision, Envisioning Race explores the social constructions of vision and the processes by w...
People of colour are often expected to meet externally determined standards of whiteness in exchange...
This thesis is an analysis of the production of assimilation discourse, in terms of Aboriginal peopl...
The articles in this special themed section were submitted by presenters at the Australian Critical ...