The Treadmill of Identity: Treading Water, Paddling like a Duck but still in the Same Pond

IF 0.8 Q2 LAW
S. Gilbert
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Examining the history and current state of defining what is an Aborigine in the landscape of Australian political affairs is a chronicle which is long and complex. The interests of Australia’s original peoples in these discussions are also complex and it is proposed here, shaped by notions of strategic essentialisms and exclusion from the modernity project. To understand some of these complexities, it is critical to identify why and by whom definitions of Aboriginality are generated. Placing definition-making within a context of settler-state motivations, a racial analytic and the requirement for testing a legislated ‘Aboriginality’ being placed onto Aboriginal Australian communities themselves, must also be central. Two major arguments are posited here: first, that a legal Aboriginality exists solely for the management of Indigenous populations to their end of Wolfe’s ‘territoriality’ and Razack’s ‘disposability’; and second, that Indigenous Australians – like other Indigenous peoples around the world – are continually forced to speak to legal Aboriginalities which represent almost none of the interests or challenges they face in their struggle for physical and cultural survival.
身份的跑步机:踏水,像鸭子一样划桨,但仍然在同一个池塘里
考察澳大利亚政治事务中定义原住民的历史和现状是一部漫长而复杂的编年史。澳大利亚原住民在这些讨论中的利益也是复杂的,这是由战略本质主义和现代性项目排斥的概念所形成的。要理解其中的一些复杂性,关键是要确定为什么以及由谁来定义原住民。将定义制定放在定居者国家动机的背景下,进行种族分析,并将测试立法“原住民性”的要求放在澳大利亚原住民社区本身,也必须是核心。这里提出了两个主要论点:首先,合法的原住民身份的存在只是为了管理原住民,直到他们结束Wolfe的“属地性”和Razack的“可支配性”;第二,澳大利亚土著人——和世界各地的其他土著人一样——不断被迫与合法的土著人对话,这几乎不代表他们在物质和文化生存斗争中面临的利益或挑战。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
0.60
自引率
40.00%
发文量
1
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