American Ethnologist
Volume 45, Issue 4, 2018, Pages 521-532

Turbulent dislocations in central Australia:: Exile, place making, and the promises of elsewhere (Article)

Hinkson M.*
  • a Alfred Deakin Institute for Citizenship and Globalisation, Deakin University, 221 Burwood Highway, Burwood, VIC 3125, Australia

Abstract

A Warlpiri woman is exiled from her community in Australia's Central Desert and pursues a new life in metropolitan Adelaide. The state promises that Aboriginal people will have better life prospects beyond their remote territories, but the grueling disruptions of their relationships to place shows otherwise. To be caught between alternate and transforming subjectivities associated with the desert and the city is to inhabit a particular kind of exile. Under contemporary conditions, exile acquires new ambiguities and intensities, as anxious mobility and digital communication enable people to participate in aspects of life from which they have been physically separated, albeit in attenuated ways. Exile is a contradictory experience of liberation and entrapment that generates, but ultimately withholds, new possible selves and lives. © 2018 by the American Anthropological Association

Author Keywords

precarity Warlpiri Aboriginal Australia punitive governance Exile Place making displacement

Index Keywords

[No Keywords available]

Link
https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85055690038&doi=10.1111%2famet.12706&partnerID=40&md5=0e90ddeaf7e0cea7b374448e2218f7aa

DOI: 10.1111/amet.12706
ISSN: 00940496
Cited by: 4
Original Language: English