Terra Nullius: A Journey Through No One's Land

Terra Nullius: A Journey Through No One's Land
ISBN-10
1595580514
ISBN-13
9781595580511
Series
Terra Nullius
Category
History / Australia & New Zealand
Pages
248
Language
English
Published
2007
Publisher
New Press
Author
Sven Lindqvist

Description

Long before the word “genocide” was coined, the British invasion of Australia had annihilated approximately nine-tenths of the continent's original population of Aborigines. The creation of white Australia depended upon the legal fiction of “terra nullius”—no man's land—the claim that Aboriginal lands were inhabited by people who would soon die out and who could be helped on the way to extinction if they lingered.


Sven Lindqvist, the widely acclaimed and internationally renowned author of “Exterminate All the Brutes” and A History of Bombing, brings his original sensibility to bear as he travels 7,000 miles through Australia in search of places where belief in the rights of the white man and the annihilation of the “lower races” were put into practice. While Australia continues to reckon with its violent past—echoed in the United States' treatment of Native Americans and Europe's colonization of other continents—Lindqvist evokes a shocking history in which young boys were kidnapped to dive for pearls, then whipped and abandoned when the bends ruined them for work; “half-caste” children were taken from their mothers; and natives were misdiagnosed with STDs, put in neck irons, and sent to internment camps on remote islands. Lindqvist also recalls the work of ethnologists who brought their own prejudices to bear in studying Aborigines as primitives close to the origins of civilization, later inspiring Freud and Durkheim. At the same time he describes a beautiful and strange land, sacred to the native people who had inhabited it for centuries and celebrated in a long tradition of richly symbolic art.


A movingly idiosyncratic travelogue and a powerful act of historical excavation, Terra Nullius is the illuminating and disturbing story of how “no man's land” became the province of the white man.


Other editions

Similar books

  • More Than Law and Order: Policing a Changing Society, 1945-1992
    By Susan Butterworth

    Immediately after the World War II, the police were in a sorry state. They were short on resources and antiquated in their systems. As a result, the period covered by this book saw major change and modernization.

  • Bad Colonists: The South Seas Letters of Vernon Lee Walker & Louis Becke
    By Nicholas Thomas, Vernon Lee Walker, Louis Becke

    A look at the particularities of colonial life in the South Pacific through the correspondence of two colonialists. ldquo;Thomas and Eves have addressed a topic of significant concern-the complex particularities of colonial culture and ...

  • Imagining Australia: Literature and Culture in the New New World
    By Chris Wallace-Crabbe, Judith Ryan

    Beginning in the last third of the twentieth century, Australian literary and cultural studies underwent a profound transformation to become an important testing ground of new ideas and theories. How...

  • Imagining Australian Space: Cultural Studies and Spatial Inquiry
    By Ian Buchanan, Ruth Barcan

    Barcan (humanities, U. of Western Sydney) and Buchanan (English, U. of Tasmania) present 14 papers which aim to explore a representative range of Australian spaces through a range of perspectives...

  • Australia Imagined: Views from the British Periodical Press 1800-1900
    By Judith Johnston, Monica Anderson

    Australians have, until very recently, taken their British inheritance for granted. This timely anthology is a collection of writings, and some cartoons, from the 19th century British periodical press, which...

  • The Building of Brisbane, 1828-1940
    By William J. Job

    Richly illustrated, this fascinating panorama explores architectural gems from Brisbane's first settlement to the beginning of World War II. More than 300 sketches, many drawn by the author, show the...

  • The Temperament of Generations: Fifty Years of Writing in Meanjin
    By Jenny Lee, Philip Mead, Gerald Murnane

    A collection of literary, cultural and political writings published in Meanjin over the fifty years since its foundation, together with archival material and editorial commentary.

  • John Locke
    By Richard Ithamar Aaron

    A biography supplements a careful discussion of Locke's ethical and political philosophy

  • The Pacific Islands: An Encyclopedia
    By Brij V. Lal, Kate Fortune

    Urbanization in the Pacific has been comparaFIVE LIVING IN CITIES tively late , reflecting the colonial experience . Many urban areas have developed sizeable and permanent Urbanization populations only in the last few decades .

  • Kiwi: The People's Bird
    By Neville Peat

    Back in 1990, when Neville Peat wrote The Incredible Kiwi, the national bird was in retreat, from habitat loss and the severe impact of predation. It was not well understood,...