The aboriginal intervention in colonial discourse: challenging white control of cross-racial intersubjectivity

Written against the background of critical whiteness studies, the article deals with the poetry of Romaine Moreton and Alf Taylor, two contemporary Aboriginal voices who are not yet widely recognised, although their work is powerful and compelling. They both use their medium to explore various as...

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Main Author: Cerce, Danica
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Penerbit Universiti Kebangsaan Malaysia 2018
Online Access:http://journalarticle.ukm.my/13580/
http://journalarticle.ukm.my/13580/1/19326-69255-1-PB.pdf
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author Cerce, Danica
author_facet Cerce, Danica
author_sort Cerce, Danica
building UKM Institutional Repository
collection Online Access
description Written against the background of critical whiteness studies, the article deals with the poetry of Romaine Moreton and Alf Taylor, two contemporary Aboriginal voices who are not yet widely recognised, although their work is powerful and compelling. They both use their medium to explore various aspects of indigeneity and to intervene in the public dynamics of racial separation. In their attempt to instil agency for the postcolonial Indigenous subject, they challenge what Sara Suleri (2003) calls “the static lines of demarcation” between colonial power and disempowered culture – the assumptions about such binary oppositions as domination and subordination, centre and margin, self and other, upon which the logic of coloniality often stands. In convening a cross-racial public, the rhetoric of the two poets’ critique generates a discursive guilt in non-Indigenous readers and foregrounds the need for the intersubjectivity of race; that is, a zone of mutual respect and cooperation between Indigenous and non-Indigenous people.
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spelling oai:generic.eprints.org:135802019-10-26T22:37:58Z http://journalarticle.ukm.my/13580/ The aboriginal intervention in colonial discourse: challenging white control of cross-racial intersubjectivity Cerce, Danica Written against the background of critical whiteness studies, the article deals with the poetry of Romaine Moreton and Alf Taylor, two contemporary Aboriginal voices who are not yet widely recognised, although their work is powerful and compelling. They both use their medium to explore various aspects of indigeneity and to intervene in the public dynamics of racial separation. In their attempt to instil agency for the postcolonial Indigenous subject, they challenge what Sara Suleri (2003) calls “the static lines of demarcation” between colonial power and disempowered culture – the assumptions about such binary oppositions as domination and subordination, centre and margin, self and other, upon which the logic of coloniality often stands. In convening a cross-racial public, the rhetoric of the two poets’ critique generates a discursive guilt in non-Indigenous readers and foregrounds the need for the intersubjectivity of race; that is, a zone of mutual respect and cooperation between Indigenous and non-Indigenous people. Penerbit Universiti Kebangsaan Malaysia 2018 Article PeerReviewed application/pdf en http://journalarticle.ukm.my/13580/1/19326-69255-1-PB.pdf Cerce, Danica (2018) The aboriginal intervention in colonial discourse: challenging white control of cross-racial intersubjectivity. GEMA: Online Journal of Language Studies, 18 (1). pp. 38-50. ISSN 1675-8021 http://ejournal.ukm.my/gema/issue/view/1073
spellingShingle Cerce, Danica
The aboriginal intervention in colonial discourse: challenging white control of cross-racial intersubjectivity
title The aboriginal intervention in colonial discourse: challenging white control of cross-racial intersubjectivity
title_full The aboriginal intervention in colonial discourse: challenging white control of cross-racial intersubjectivity
title_fullStr The aboriginal intervention in colonial discourse: challenging white control of cross-racial intersubjectivity
title_full_unstemmed The aboriginal intervention in colonial discourse: challenging white control of cross-racial intersubjectivity
title_short The aboriginal intervention in colonial discourse: challenging white control of cross-racial intersubjectivity
title_sort aboriginal intervention in colonial discourse: challenging white control of cross-racial intersubjectivity
url http://journalarticle.ukm.my/13580/
http://journalarticle.ukm.my/13580/
http://journalarticle.ukm.my/13580/1/19326-69255-1-PB.pdf