Unofficial apartheid, convention and country towns: reflections on Australian history and the New South Wales Freedom Rides of 1965
journal contribution
posted on 2023-05-17, 12:59authored byEdmonds, P
Many scholars have not only ignored or disavowed the long history of segregation of towns in country Australia, they have also failed to ask germane questions regarding the distinct terms of the production of racialized and gendered bodies and spaces in settler towns and cities, and how such deep genealogies of segregation continue to shape nominally postcolonial urban spaces. This article explores the history of segregation in New South Wales country towns, such as Walgett, and the partial success of the New South Wales Freedom Rides of 1965 that sought to direct national attention to spatial and social partitions in them. While some scholars have referred to segregation in Australia as ‘convention’, this article argues that claims of a more benign Australian convention or ‘unofficial apartheid’ may be exposed to reveal a concomitant range of strategic racialized manoeuvres, everyday yet official adjudications enacted by municipal and other authorities to create violent geographies of exclusion. Interrogation of convention at the street, town, and everyday level reveals the devastating biopolitics of the Australian settler-colonial urban, which while structurally different was no less devastating and thoroughgoing than those of the American South.
History
Publication title
Postcolonial Studies
Volume
15
Pagination
167-190
ISSN
1368-8790
Department/School
School of Humanities
Publisher
Routledge
Place of publication
London
Rights statement
Copyright 2012 The Institute of Postcolonial Studies