Fear and wonder out bush: engaging a critical anthropological perspective on indigenous alterity

Eve Vincent
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引用次数: 2

Abstract

Abstract When an Aboriginal family group called ‘Aunty Joan Mob’ travel ‘out bush’, they make contact with awe- and fear-inspiring country. In attempting to make sense of their wonder, I would be ill-served to rely too heavily on a kind of culturalism, which might attribute the source of this wonder to ontological precepts long shared by these (and other) Aboriginal people. Instead I seek to engage a ‘critical’ anthropological perspective in arguing that a range of factors are all crucial to understanding why Aunty Joan Mob engage in “wonder discourse”, through which they consider the primordial Aboriginal past and the alterity embodied by their own ancestors. I outline the role of settler colonial history, national political developments and the liberal promise of the recognition of Indigenous cultural difference, bitter local intra-Aboriginal conflicts, and the subordination of Aboriginal people within rural Australia’s racial schema. Taken together, these factors help explain that the bush today acts as a repository for latent powers, which are both marveled at and feared. Out bush Aboriginal people seek to escape the white gaze: this is a place where Aboriginal’s ability to survive, independent of white foodstuffs, is conjured up and relished. Wonder attends to Aunty Joan Mob’s experience of being in the bush, which becomes, albeit temporarily, a politically transformative imaginary space.
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恐惧和惊奇走出丛林:对土著另类的批判性人类学视角
当一个名为“琼阿姨暴民”的土著家庭团体“走出丛林”时,他们与令人敬畏和恐惧的国家接触。在试图理解他们的奇迹时,我过于依赖一种文化主义是不明智的,这种文化主义可能会将这种奇迹的来源归因于这些(和其他)土著居民长期共享的本体论戒律。相反,我试图采用一种“批判性”的人类学观点,认为一系列因素对于理解为什么Joan Mob阿姨参与“奇迹话语”至关重要,通过这种话语,他们考虑了原始的土著过去和他们自己祖先所体现的另类。我概述了殖民者殖民历史的作用,国家政治发展和承认土著文化差异的自由承诺,当地土著内部的激烈冲突,以及土著人民在澳大利亚农村种族模式中的从属地位。综上所述,这些因素有助于解释为什么今天的灌木丛是潜在力量的储存库,这些力量既令人惊叹又令人恐惧。丛林外的土著居民寻求逃离白人的目光:在这里,土著居民不依赖白人食物而生存的能力被赋予了魔力,并得到了享受。Wonder关注Joan Mob阿姨在灌木丛中的经历,尽管是暂时的,但这成为了一个政治变革的想象空间。
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