To Cut Down the Dreaming: Epistemic Violence, Ambivalence and the Logic of Coloniality

IF 0.9 3区 社会学 Q3 ANTHROPOLOGY
A. Kearney
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引用次数: 4

Abstract

ABSTRACT The main argument presented here is that in cultural contact zones, such as the Australian settler state, there can emerge violent tendencies in dominant patterns of thought, as both epistemic habits and systems of value. The logic of coloniality is one of war, destruction and inequality, and this is expressed through attempted erasure and actual ambivalence towards Indigenous peoples, their lands, waters, Laws and cultures. This is supported by habits of epistemic violence and axiological retreat. This paper examines such habits, through an ethnographically informed and localised case study of the destruction of an ancestral Dreaming site on Yanyuwa country in the Gulf of Carpentaria, northern Australia. In this instance the body of Yulungurri, the ancestral Tiger Shark, manifest in a large cycad palm, was cut down. Read through the lens of axiological retreat, and coloniality’s ambivalence towards Indigenous presence, the discussion considers the dispositions which lead to and support violence in such forms and how these might become naturalised or concealed in everyday life.
切断梦想:认知暴力、矛盾心理与殖民逻辑
本文提出的主要论点是,在文化接触区,如澳大利亚的移民国家,作为认知习惯和价值体系,在占主导地位的思维模式中可能出现暴力倾向。殖民主义的逻辑是战争、破坏和不平等,这表现在对土著人民、他们的土地、水域、法律和文化的企图抹杀和实际矛盾心理上。这是由认知暴力和价值论撤退的习惯所支持的。本文通过对澳大利亚北部卡彭塔利亚湾的Yanyuwa国家祖先梦想遗址的破坏进行人种学和本地化的案例研究,考察了这些习惯。在这个例子中,虎鲨的祖先Yulungurri的身体,在一个巨大的苏铁棕榈中显现出来,被砍倒了。透过价值论的撤退,以及殖民对土著存在的矛盾心理,讨论了导致和支持这种形式的暴力的倾向,以及这些倾向如何在日常生活中自然化或隐藏起来。
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来源期刊
Anthropological Forum
Anthropological Forum ANTHROPOLOGY-
CiteScore
3.60
自引率
10.00%
发文量
14
期刊介绍: Anthropological Forum is a journal of social anthropology and comparative sociology that was founded in 1963 and has a distinguished publication history. The journal provides a forum for both established and innovative approaches to anthropological research. A special section devoted to contributions on applied anthropology appears periodically. The editors are especially keen to publish new approaches based on ethnographic and theoretical work in the journal"s established areas of strength: Australian culture and society, Aboriginal Australia, Southeast Asia and the Pacific.
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