通过入籍的移民文化适应:比较叙利亚和希腊在白澳的入籍申请

IF 0.9 Q3 DEMOGRAPHY
Andonis Piperoglou
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引用次数: 3

摘要

1903年,澳大利亚联邦政府通过了《入籍法案》(1903)。然而,在一个关心“外国因素”的国家,获得入籍并不是一件容易的事。该法案的一项关键法律要求规定,“居住在英联邦的人,不是英国臣民,也不是亚洲、非洲或太平洋岛屿的土著居民”,打算在澳大利亚定居,可以申请入籍。由于归化法明确将来自世界某些地区的人排除在外,因此归化申请在根本上就是种族化的。对于叙利亚人和希腊人来说,能否入籍取决于他们是否被接纳为白人臣民。本文比较了叙利亚人和希腊人的入籍申请文件,以探讨澳大利亚入籍法的模糊包容性。在比较受到相似外部表征的两个群体如何申请入籍时,有人认为,申请入籍是一种模式,通过这种模式,移民通过认同占主导地位的白人-财产关系,向外执行他们的文化适应。在此过程中,这篇文章打开了移民史上的一个领域,来考虑申请入籍是如何取决于移民将自己表现为忠诚的定居者的能力的。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Migrant Acculturation via Naturalisation: Comparing Syrian and Greek Applications for Naturalisation in White Australia
ABSTRACT In 1903, the Commonwealth Australian government passed the Naturalisation Act (1903). Acquiring naturalisation, however, was not straightforward in a country that was concerned about its ‘foreign element’. A key legal requirement of the Act stipulated that ‘a person resident in the Commonwealth, not being a British subject, and not being an aboriginal native of Asia, Africa, or the Islands of the Pacific’, who intends to settle in Australia could apply for a naturalisation. Because the naturalisation law explicitly excluded people who were from certain regions of the world, applying for naturalisation was, at its root, racialised. For Syrians and Greeks, acquiring naturalisation came to hinge on the question of whether they were to be accepted as white subjects. This article compares naturalisation application files of Syrians and Greeks to explore the ambiguous inclusivity of Australia’s naturalisation law. In comparing how two groups subjected to similar external representations applied for naturalisation, it is argued that applying for naturalisation was a mode by which migrants outwardly performed their acculturation by identifying with a dominant whiteness-property nexus. In doing so, the article opens terrain in migration history to consider how applying for naturalisation was contingent on migrants’ capacity to present themselves as loyal settlers.
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来源期刊
CiteScore
1.20
自引率
0.00%
发文量
23
期刊介绍: Immigrants & Minorities, founded in 1981, provides a major outlet for research into the history of immigration and related studies. It seeks to deal with the complex themes involved in the construction of "race" and with the broad sweep of ethnic and minority relations within a historical setting. Its coverage is international and recent issues have dealt with studies on the USA, Australia, the Middle East and the UK. The journal also supports an extensive review section.
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