Full Text

Turn on search term navigation

Copyright Australian National University Press 2016

Abstract

The contemporary settler polities, he later argued, have been 'impervious to regime change'.1 It was an Australian-produced response to the consolidation and global spread of postcolonial studies as discourse and method (quite interestingly, postcolonial studies had also originally been an Australian intellectual export). [...]as well as interdisciplinary, his work was eminently and inherently comparative. Aziz Rana, for example, followed Patrick's lead and looked at the ways in which settler conceptions of 'freedom' shaped policy with regards to variously racialised alterities and emphasised the binary nature of settler constituent practice.4 More recently, Jared Sexton offered a critical response to the consolidation of indigenous and settler colonial studies.5 Sexton is concerned with the ways settler colonial studies and native studies neglect slavery as a problem as much as they neglect 'abolition' in their approaches to settler decolonisation.6 For native studies, Sexton summarises, 'anti-racism without indigenous leadership is a wager for black junior partnership in the settler colonial state'.7 He dismisses this placing: there are ways out of settler colonialism other than being indigenous (or an 'ally').8 Abolition' (understood flexibly and in an expanded way) will liberate all because abolition is not about indigenous sovereignty as opposed to the settler one, but against sovereignty per se. Native American studies', and that 'settler colonial theory is now dogma'.17 While the content of this reaction is incontrovertible (there are many colonialisms, and yet this was never contradicted in the first place), the context where this is stated is telling: settler colonial studies is forcing a redefinition of established disciplinary boundaries.

Details

Title
Patrick Wolfe's dialectics
Author
Veracini, Lorenzo 1 

 Swinburne University of Technology 
Pages
249-260
Publication year
2016
Publication date
2016
Publisher
Australian National University Press
ISSN
03148769
e-ISSN
18379389
Source type
Scholarly Journal
Language of publication
English
ProQuest document ID
2517678306
Copyright
Copyright Australian National University Press 2016