{"title":"Blood Call and 'Natural Flutters': Xavier Herbert's Racialised Quartet of Heteronormativity","authors":"Liz Conor","doi":"10.5130/CSR.V23I2.5819","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"National belonging for Xavier Herbert was intimately tied to interracial sexuality. ‘Euraustralians’ (‘half-castes’) were for Herbert a redemptive motif that could assuage the ‘awful loneliness of the colonial born’ by which he hinted at the land claim of settler-colonials as spurious. Herbert’s exposure of the spectrum of interracial sex—from companionate marriage to casual prostitution to endemic sexual assault—in his novels Capricornia (1938) and Poor Fellow My Country (1975) was unprecedented and potentially game-changing in the administration of Aboriginal women’s sexuality under the assimilation era. But his deeply fraught masculinity was expressed through a picaresque frontier manhood that expressed itself through this spectrum of relations with Aboriginal women. For all his radical assertions of a ‘Euraustralian’ or hybrid nation, Herbert was myopic and dismissive of the women attached to the ‘lean loins’ he hoped it would spring from. He was also vitriolic about the white women, including wives, who interfered with white men’s access to Aboriginal women’s bodies. In this article I examine how Herbert’s utopian racial destinies depended on the unexamined sexual contract of monogamy and the asymmetrical pact to which it consigned white men and white women, and the class of sexually available Indigenous women, or ‘black velvet’, it rested on in colonial scenarios of sex.","PeriodicalId":51871,"journal":{"name":"Cultural Studies Review","volume":"72 1","pages":"70-86"},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2017-11-27","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Cultural Studies Review","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.5130/CSR.V23I2.5819","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"Q3","JCRName":"Social Sciences","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0
Abstract
National belonging for Xavier Herbert was intimately tied to interracial sexuality. ‘Euraustralians’ (‘half-castes’) were for Herbert a redemptive motif that could assuage the ‘awful loneliness of the colonial born’ by which he hinted at the land claim of settler-colonials as spurious. Herbert’s exposure of the spectrum of interracial sex—from companionate marriage to casual prostitution to endemic sexual assault—in his novels Capricornia (1938) and Poor Fellow My Country (1975) was unprecedented and potentially game-changing in the administration of Aboriginal women’s sexuality under the assimilation era. But his deeply fraught masculinity was expressed through a picaresque frontier manhood that expressed itself through this spectrum of relations with Aboriginal women. For all his radical assertions of a ‘Euraustralian’ or hybrid nation, Herbert was myopic and dismissive of the women attached to the ‘lean loins’ he hoped it would spring from. He was also vitriolic about the white women, including wives, who interfered with white men’s access to Aboriginal women’s bodies. In this article I examine how Herbert’s utopian racial destinies depended on the unexamined sexual contract of monogamy and the asymmetrical pact to which it consigned white men and white women, and the class of sexually available Indigenous women, or ‘black velvet’, it rested on in colonial scenarios of sex.
泽维尔·赫伯特的国籍归属与跨种族性行为密切相关。“欧洲澳大利亚人”(“半种姓”)对赫伯特来说是一个救赎的主题,可以缓解“出生在殖民地的可怕的孤独”,他暗示定居者-殖民者的土地主张是虚假的。赫伯特在他的小说《Capricornia》(1938)和《Poor Fellow My Country》(1975)中揭露了跨种族性行为的范围——从伴侣婚姻到随意卖淫,再到地方性侵犯——这是前所未有的,可能会改变同化时代对土著妇女性行为的管理。但他那深沉的阳刚之气是通过一种流浪汉式的边疆男子气概来表达的,这种男子气概是通过与土著妇女的一系列关系来表达的。尽管赫伯特激进地宣称要建立一个“欧亚混血”国家,但他的目光短浅,对那些依附于他希望由此产生的“瘦腰”的女性不屑一顾。他还刻薄地批评白人妇女,包括妻子,她们妨碍白人男子接触土著妇女的身体。在这篇文章中,我研究了赫伯特乌托邦式的种族命运是如何依赖于未经检验的一夫一妻制的性契约,以及它委托给白人男性和白人女性的不对称契约,以及它在殖民地性场景中所依赖的可获得性的土著女性阶级,或“黑天鹅绒”。
期刊介绍:
Cultural Studies Review is a peer-reviewed journal devoted to the publication and circulation of quality thinking in cultural studies—in particular work that draws out new kinds of politics, as they emerge in diverse sites. We are interested in writing that shapes new relationships between social groups, cultural practices and forms of knowledge and which provides some account of the questions motivating its production. We welcome work from any discipline that meets these aims. Aware that new thinking in cultural studies may produce a new poetics we have a dedicated new writing section to encourage the publication of works of critical innovation, political intervention and creative textuality.