In this article I utilise critical discourse analysis to investigate the discursive practices evident in the Gillard Government’s 2011 ‘Closing the Gap’ speech. The speech is interpreted as a performative activity which normalises the racialised privilege/disadvantage divide in contemporary Australia by framing this divide as meritocratic. Inherently contradictory discourses are used to position both the government and Indigenes in antithetical ways. The government is constructed as a benevolent authority, yet is excused from responsibility for ‘closing the gap’. Indigenous peoples are framed as culturally deficient while simultaneously held responsible to ‘close the gap’. The contentiousness of these discourses is minimised by their portrayal as hegemonic commonsense.
History
Publication title
International Journal of Critical Indigenous Studies
Volume
5
Pagination
2-12
ISSN
1837-0144
Department/School
School of Social Sciences
Publisher
Indigenous Studies Reseach Network, Queensland University of Technology
Place of publication
Queensland
Rights statement
Copyright 2012 International Journal of Critical Indigenous Studies
Repository Status
Restricted
Socio-economic Objectives
Other culture and society not elsewhere classified