Death in a Dry River: Black Life, White Property, Parched Justice

This essay deals with the sentence handed down in April 2010 on the death of the 33 year-old Kumantaye Ryder in the dry creek bed of the Todd River in Alice Springs, Central Australia. The riverbed, we argue, is a racially marked and politically charged location that plays an historical and continui...

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Main Author: Perera, Suvendrini
Format: Journal Article
Published: Edinburgh University Press 2011
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/12148
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author Perera, Suvendrini
author_facet Perera, Suvendrini
author_sort Perera, Suvendrini
building Curtin Institutional Repository
collection Online Access
description This essay deals with the sentence handed down in April 2010 on the death of the 33 year-old Kumantaye Ryder in the dry creek bed of the Todd River in Alice Springs, Central Australia. The riverbed, we argue, is a racially marked and politically charged location that plays an historical and continuing role in defining relations between settler and colonized. We situate our analysis of this site in a context where autonomy over and access to land, and the significance of remote townships and town camps, are bitterly contested as part of a wider clash over Aboriginal subjectivities, citizenships and futures. Drawing on Cheryl Harris's critical insights (1993) into how in the United States ‘rights in property are contingent on, intertwined with, and conflated with race’, we examine the sentencing of the accused in the death of Kumantaye Ryder against the multiple meanings of property. We conclude our analysis by underscoring the manner in which racialised formations of law and property work to secure, entitle and affirm the very possibility of life and future itself.
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spelling curtin-20.500.11937-121482018-03-29T09:06:08Z Death in a Dry River: Black Life, White Property, Parched Justice Perera, Suvendrini This essay deals with the sentence handed down in April 2010 on the death of the 33 year-old Kumantaye Ryder in the dry creek bed of the Todd River in Alice Springs, Central Australia. The riverbed, we argue, is a racially marked and politically charged location that plays an historical and continuing role in defining relations between settler and colonized. We situate our analysis of this site in a context where autonomy over and access to land, and the significance of remote townships and town camps, are bitterly contested as part of a wider clash over Aboriginal subjectivities, citizenships and futures. Drawing on Cheryl Harris's critical insights (1993) into how in the United States ‘rights in property are contingent on, intertwined with, and conflated with race’, we examine the sentencing of the accused in the death of Kumantaye Ryder against the multiple meanings of property. We conclude our analysis by underscoring the manner in which racialised formations of law and property work to secure, entitle and affirm the very possibility of life and future itself. 2011 Journal Article http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/12148 10.3366/soma.2011.0007 Edinburgh University Press restricted
spellingShingle Perera, Suvendrini
Death in a Dry River: Black Life, White Property, Parched Justice
title Death in a Dry River: Black Life, White Property, Parched Justice
title_full Death in a Dry River: Black Life, White Property, Parched Justice
title_fullStr Death in a Dry River: Black Life, White Property, Parched Justice
title_full_unstemmed Death in a Dry River: Black Life, White Property, Parched Justice
title_short Death in a Dry River: Black Life, White Property, Parched Justice
title_sort death in a dry river: black life, white property, parched justice
url http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/12148