The State as Father: 1910–1960
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Date
Authors
McGrath, Ann
Journal Title
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Volume Title
Publisher
API Network, Curtin University of Technology, Australian Research Institute
Abstract
As we have seen, Aboriginal people were omitted from the concept
of the new Australian nation. Denied citizenship until 1948 and
excluded from the census and voting for federal elections until 1968,
the commonwealth could not legislate on their behalf. Not all
Aborigines had come within the power of the colonisers, though; in
remote regions, their land and communities were still their own and
frontier warfare was not yet over. Class, sex, race and ethnicity were
branded as divisive in the new nation, but colonialism located
Australia's Indigenous people not only in a special position of
oppression but also one of danger to the national interest. To
acknowledge the separate interests or d1fferent history of the Aboriginal
people would reveal the extent to which Australia's white
settlement was premised on colonial takeover and domination.
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Citation
McGrath, Ann. “The State as Father: 1910–1960.” In Creating a Nation, edited by Grimshaw, P., Marilyn Lake, Ann McGrath and Marian Quartly, 273-290. Perth: API Network, Curtin University of Technology, 2006.
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Type
Book Title
Creating a Nation
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Access Statement
Open Access
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DOI
Restricted until
2037-12-31
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