Boundary Writing: An Exploration of Race, Culture, and Gender Binaries in Contemporary Australia

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Lynette Russell
University of Hawaii Press, Jun 30, 2006 - Social Science - 224 pages

Have globalization and the emergence of virtual cultures reduced cultural diversity? Will the world become homogenized or Americanized? Boundary Writing sets out to demonstrate that this oversimplification denies the reality that today there is greater space for cultural diversity than ever before. It explores the desire to categorize individuals and collectivities into racial, ethnic, gender, and sexuality categories (black and white, men and women, gay and straight), which is a feature of most Western societies. More specifically, it analyzes the boundaries and edges of these categories and concepts.

Across nine chapters, contributors reveal that such binaries are often too restrictive. Through a series of case studies they consider how these various concepts overlap, coincide, and at times conflict.They investigate the tension between these classifications that in turn produce individual speaking positions. Many people—indigenous, native, Anglo-settler, recent migrants of diverse ethnic backgrounds, gay, transgender, queer—occupy an "in between" position that is strategically shifting with the social, political, and economic circumstances of the individual. In Boundary Writing, the reader will journey through various complex permutations of identity and in particular the ways in which indigeneity, race, sex, and gender interact and even counter-act one another.

Contributors: Erez Cohen, Aaron Corn, Bruno David, Neparrna Gumbula, Michele Grossman, Myfanwy McDonald, Clive Moore, Stephen Pritchard, Liz Reed, Lynette Russell.

 

Selected pages

Contents

Introduction
1
From Beats to Cybersex Australian Gay Male Appropriation of Public Spaces
18
The Nonsurgical Option Deciding Not to Decide about Gender Identity
43
NonAnglo and NonAboriginal Australian Multiculturalism the Third Side of the BlackWhite Divide
66
Cultural Calculus Cultural Translation and the Politics of Indigenous Cultural Property
86
different lives in different places A Space for Multiple White Identities through Aboriginal Rock Music
103
Indigenous Rights and the Mutability of Cultures Tradition Change and the Politics of Recognition
122
Beyond Orality and Literacy Textuality Modernity and Representation in Gularabulu Stories from the West Kimberley
149
Rom and the Academy Repositioned Binary Models in Yolrju Intellectual Traditions and their Application to Wider Intercultural Dialogues
170
Contributors
199
Index
203
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About the author (2006)

Lynette Russell holds the Chair in Australian Indigenous Studies at Monash University and is director of the Centre of Australian Indigenous Studies.

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