White Flour, White Power: From Rations to Citizenship in Central Australia

by
Format: Paperback
Pub. Date: 2002-07-11
Publisher(s): Cambridge University Press
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Summary

The colonial practice of rationing goods to Aboriginal people has been neglected in the study of Australian frontiers. This book argues that much of the colonial experience in Central Australia can be understood by seeing rationing as a fundamental, though flexible, instrument of colonial government. Rationing was the material basis for a variety of colonial ventures: scientific, evangelical, pastoral and the post-war program of 'assimilation'. Combining history and anthropology in a cultural study of rationing, this book develops a new narrative of the colonisation of Central Australia. Two arguments underpin this story: that the colonists were puzzled by the motives of the Indigenous recipients; and that they were highly inventive in the meanings and moral foundations they ascribed to the rationing relationship. This study goes to the heart of contemporary reflections on the nature of Indigenous 'citizenship'.

Table of Contents

List of Tables
vi
Acknowledgments vii
Conversions viii
Maps
ix
A Theatre of Stages 1(12)
PART ONE
Rationing the Inexplicable
13(12)
Rationed Actors
25(24)
PART TWO
Rural Central Australia, 1914--40
49(19)
Town, Cash and Supervision
68(12)
`A Christian Cannot Be a Parasite'
80(12)
The World War in Town and Hinterland
92(15)
PART THREE
`Assimilation'
107(11)
The Crisis of Managed Consumption
118(29)
Settlements and Families
147(37)
Alice Springs and Its Town Camps
184(20)
Continuities 204(19)
Notes 223(18)
References 241(7)
Index 248

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