Document Type

Journal Article

Publication Details

Clark, M. 2004, 'Mudrooroo: Crafty Impostor or Rebel with a Cause?', Who's Who? Hoaxes, Imposture and Identity Crises in Australian Literature: Australian Literary Studies, pp. 101-110.

{NB: item deleted 26 June 2009}

Abstract

HILLEL Schwartz defines imposture as 'the compulsive assumption of invented lives' and impersonation as 'the concerted assumption of another's public identity' (72). This is not to say that one cannot be at once an impostor and an impersonator: the best impersonators are surely the impostors whose secrets we know nothing of. That we 'know them not' is precisely because they are able to manipulate identities that are recognised by others. Imposture is not a state achieved by an individual, but is dependent for its success upon the society in which it is practised and authenticated. Contemporary attempts to understand the subject in terms of authenticity have, however, become as complicated and controversial as its antithesis, imposture. This paper considers the ways in which Australia's racialised social order permitted the writer Mudrooroo to 'pass' as Indigenous, and to gain recognition as the first Aboriginal novelist.

ANZSRC / FoR Code

2005 LITERARY STUDIES

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