介绍:多样化的黑人挖掘者的历史

IF 0.4 Q1 HISTORY Aboriginal History Pub Date : 2015-12-16 DOI:10.22459/AH.39.2015.06
N. Riseman
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引用次数: 2

摘要

当我在2004年开始研究原住民和托雷斯海峡岛民的兵役历史时,这是一个非常小众的学术领域。David Huggonson在20世纪80年代和90年代对第一次世界大战做了一些研究,Robert Hall的经典著作《黑色挖掘者》(1989年)和《边缘战士》(1995年)为第一次和第二次世界大战的经历设定了一个主导叙事:尽管法规明确禁止“非欧洲血统或血统”的人入伍,但土著人和托雷斯海峡岛民设法规避了这些规则,并在两次冲突中服役。对于那些在正规部队服役的男女来说,这在很大程度上是一种平等的经历——通常是他们一生中第一次——然而,他们回到家乡后,仍然受到歧视。哈贡森估计约有400名原住民参加了第一次世界大战;霍尔估计,大约有3000名土著人和850名托雷斯海峡岛民正式参加了第二次世界大战,更不用说在偏远的澳大利亚北部从事非正式劳动的数百人。一些地方历史强化了这种主导叙事,包括希瑟·古道尔(Heather Goodall)、凯·桑德斯(Kay Saunders)和伊丽莎白·奥斯本(Elizabeth Osborne)等学者的著作。现在,在第一次和第二次世界大战中,土著人和托雷斯海峡岛民的人数分别增加到至少1 000人和5 000人。这些男女来自不同的文化、教育、语言、地区和就业背景。
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Introduction: Diversifying the black diggers' histories
When I started researching Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander military service history in 2004, this was a very niche academic area. David Huggonson did some work in the 1980s and 1990s on the First World War, and Robert Hall's canonical texts 'The Black Diggers' (1989) and 'Fighters from the Fringe' (1995) had set a dominant narrative of the First and Second World War experiences: notwithstanding regulations explicitly prohibiting enlistment of persons 'not substantially of European origin or descent', Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people managed to circumvent the rules and served in both conflicts. For those men and women enlisted in regular units, it was largely an egalitarian experience - often for the first times in their lives - yet they returned home to continuing discrimination. Huggonson estimated about 400 Aboriginal men served in the First World War; Hall estimated approximately 3,000 Aboriginal people and 850 Torres Strait Islanders formally served in the Second World War, not to mention the hundreds more who served in informal, labouring capacities in remote northern Australia. Some local histories enhanced this dominant narrative of participation, including the works of scholars such as Heather Goodall, Kay Saunders and Elizabeth Osborne. Now the estimates have increased to at least 1,000 and 5,000 Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander personnel in the First and Second World Wars respectively. These men and women came from diverse cultural, educational, linguistic, regional and employment backgrounds.
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