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Paternalism and complicity: or how not to atone for the 'Sins of the Father'

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journal contribution
posted on 2024-11-14, 06:00 authored by Fiona Probyn-Rapsey
The cultural politics of Australian colonialism revolve around discourses of paternalism and the ' protection' of Aboriginal people. Understanding how paternalism reproduces itself transgenerationally, and between whites and Aboriginal people, between subordinated groups, between women, is one way to approach its limits. Starting with this premise, I examine the ways in which paternalism reproduces itself, such that even today white paternalistic attitudes towards Aboriginal people and culture are pervasive. I focus here on Mary Ellen Jordan' s Australian memoir Balanda: My Year in Arnhem Land (2005), which is critical of, and complicit with, the biopolitical power of paternalism and its accompanying rhetoric of 'protection ' . I read this memoir within the context of a broader, shifting genealogy of protection within Australian cultural history, teasing out some of the implications of the capacity of paternalism to mutate and to retain its cultural and political influence.

History

Citation

Probyn-Rapsey, F. (2007). Paternalism and complicity: or how not to atone for the 'Sins of the Father'. Australian Literary Studies, 23 (1), 92-103.

Journal title

Australian Literary Studies

Volume

23

Issue

1

Pagination

92-103

Language

English

RIS ID

109365

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