Beneath the skin: Australian citizenship, rights and Aboriginal women
Abstract
When Australia became a nation in 1901, its newly written constitution
excluded all Aborigines, male and female, from citizenship. The Australian
state was premised upon particular understandings of the bodies within it,
based upon assumptions about race, gender and culture. Black people stood
outside the white shell of Australia's emergent body politic.
Sex, or their different physical constitutions, had long precluded white
women from democratic rights within the colonies, though they all
eventually rec;eived voting rights with the coming of federation. For
Aborigines, 'race', notably skin pigment, set them apart from what is
perceived as Australia's national physique. In their traditional cosmology,
northern Australian Aborigines also privilege the importance of a metonymic
'skin'. As well as gender, 'skin' or kinship classification is central to
identity and social organisation. It determines the individual's place in their
socio-political system, relegating responsibilities and rights in relation to
everyone else, including areas of work, food and marriage.1 In white
Australian rhetoric of the early twentieth century, the emphasis on AboriginaJ
'blood' implied the distinction was not only superficial but one of
'essence'.
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Journal of Australian Studies