|
HOME
COURSE
INFORMATION
SYLLABUS
RESOURCES
Timeline
Indigenous People
Cultural Identity
Gender issues
Natural Environment
Photo
Gallery
|
FICTION
DOWN UNDER
English
215
| Cultural
Identity--Australia |
It
was ... Botany Bay, rather than Sydney Harbour, that the British
government had in mind when ... it dispatched a fleet to colonize
New South Wales in the name of the Crown. ...[I]t had been decided
that this arcane far corner of the world would be a suitable site
for a penal settlement. The American colonies having lately been
lost, the West African colonies being generally more lethal than
even villains deserved, a new dumping-ground was needed for Britain's
felons. The prison hulks of the Thames and Medway were hideously
overcrowded, and there were thousands of miscellaneously convicted
criminals, rebels, layabouts and ne'er-do-wells that the British
Establishment wished to be rid of.
Botany Bay was far away, relatively temperate, and might one day
prove strategically or commercially useful; that it was already
occupied by its native people was no handicap, in the political
morality of the time; for a start 775 luckless misfits, 582 males,
193 females, average age twenty-seven, were packed into six chartered
transports and sent to the Antipodes.
Many of them were habitual offenders, though their crimes were mostly
trivial. Their sentences were for seven years, fourteen years, or
life, but good behavior might earn them tickets-of-leave before
the expiration of their sentences, giving them limited freedom within
the settlement, and the right to a grant of land. They might indeed
be pardoned altogether at the government's discretion, but for the
vast majority transportation to Botany Bay meant perpetual exile--very
few would ever accumulate enough cash to buy a passage home. The
convicts were accompanied by a couple of hundred marines, with 27
wives and 25 children, and by miscellaneous livestock. With the
transports sailed two small warships and three ships carrying supplies.
The route took the First Fleet of Australian history via Rio de
Janeiro and the Cape of Good Hope--13,950 miles in all--and never
before had so many people traveled so far together.
For most of the convicts, never having heard of Captain Cook, let
alone read his reports (for they were almost all illiterate), it
must have been like sailing to the moon. It is hard to imagine a
more violent contrast between departure point and destination. In
England Jane Austen was at work, the Marylebone Cricket Club had
lately codified the rules of cricket and the House of Commons was
considering a motion for the abolition of slavery. In New South
Wales the cicadas chafed, the parrots squawked, and aboriginals
speaking unknown tongues hunted inconceivable marsupials. Cowering
in their creaking ships, often in chains, the prisoners of the First
Fleet went all unknowing from one to the other. [Jan Morris: Sydney,
pp. 14-15] |
| ************************ |
| ...The
Australian vernacular, or Lingo...is the language
that many, perhaps most, Australians use in factories, shops, offices,
school, on building sites, on the road, at home, in the pub and wherever
Australian is spoken. ... Although one of the youngest nations, Australia
was remarkably quick to develop its own version of English. Even more
remarkable is the affection we have for our Lingo as an essential
component of Australianness. Perhaps more than anything else, more
than swagmen and blackened billies, Ned Kelly, Gallipoli, and our
many other icons, colloquial speech is our most cherished indicator
of cultural distinctiveness. Bound up with what we say and the way
we say it are some of our fundamental, and sometimes inaccurate, ideas
about ourselves as a nation and as a people. [Graham Seal: The
Lingo: Listening to Australian English, p. 2] |
| ************************ |
Australian
Identity and the Land
The
legend of the bush and the mystique of the people who worked it
are deeply embedded in our folklore thanks to ... poets like Lawson
and Patterson.
But
how relevant are these myths when Australia is one of the most urbanised
societies on the planet? This process was well under way before
federation when settlers and their descendants sought relief from
the harsh interior along the coastal fringe.
Perhaps
the bush myths were, as some suggest, the product of alienated writers
and intellectuals dissatisfied with their 'sleazy urban frontier,'
and so took to romanticising the outback while depicting the city
as a place of moral 'corruption and exploitation' (Graeme Davison,
"Sydney and the Bush: An urban context for the Australian Legend,"
Intruders in the Bush, pp. 112, 122).
Certainly
immigrants have seen this land as something to be owned, worked
over and made productive.
However,
common law notions of ownership and the exclusivity ownership brings
sit uneasily with traditional Aboriginal spiritual and collectivist
understandings of the land. [Fact File: Australian Identity,
Immigration Museum, Melbourne] |
| ************************ |
White
Australia Policy:
The
1901 Immigration Restriction Act was popularly known as the "White
Australia Policy." The policy remained in force into the 1960s,
when [it was] gradually dismantled and finally abolished with the
passing of the 1975 Racial Discrimination Act.
The
origins of the "White Australia" policy can be traced
back to the 1850s Gold Rush period, with the white miners' resentment
towards industrious Chinese miners. Later it was hard working kanakas
(indentured labourers from Pacific islands) in Northern Queensland.
Factory workers in the southern states became strongly opposed to
all forms of immigration, which they considered as a threat to their
jobs--particularly by non-white people who they thought would accept
a lower standard of living and work for lower wages.
The
key and most evocative symbol of the White Australia Policy was
the Dictation Test. [Fact File: Post World War II Immigration
to Australia, Immigration Museum, Melbourne]
|
| ************************ |
| Cultural
Identity--New Zealand |
| |
Two Letters to the Editor
in Christchurch, New Zealand
A
Mere Column
I was disappointed that the latter question in What Is Maori? Who
Is Pakeha? was gifted a mere column. New Zealand's search for a
national identity rests on discovering what makes us as a people
unique. The use of the term Pakeha could well be the catalyst to
this long overdue debate.
As
a Pakeha New Zealander, I can only describe the word as it applies
to me. I am a young woman of largely Irish descent who can date
the arrival of ancestors into this country pre-treaty. Like most
New Zealanders my age, I understand the meaning of, and use in preference
to English equivalents, words such as "mana" and "whanau."
I believe in the concept of "turangawaewae" and know mine
is here.
I am not European. The irony of this seems lost on Anthony Hoeke
who, unlike myself, by virtue of having an English mother is entitled
to a European Union passport. I refute his assertion that my ethnicity
is only important in relation to a Maori context. I do not become
Irish by leaving New Zealand. I cannot because I am not. I am Pakeha.
His wife is not; unless she was born in new Zealand, unless when
she is away form new Zealand she yearns to be home, unless when
she sees beautiful mountains and sunsets elsewhere she compares
them unfavourably with New Zealand's beauty--as New Zealanders are
wont to do; she is Belgian.
I am not "tau-iwi." As a seventh generation New Zealander
I refuse to be considered a foreigner. I have the good fortune of
"looking like a kiwi." My friends of Asian descent--even
those whose great-grandparents arrived on the goldfields of Otago--are
not so lucky and suffer for it. Until New Zealanders are allowed
to be just that, without reference to long-forgotten ancestral homelands,
New Zealand will struggle for national identity.
Keep up the thought provoking articles.
Kate Thompson
Wellington
Time
to Be Blunt
After glancing through the article What Is Maori? Who Is Pakeha
(August) I think it's time to be blunt and say that the New Zealand
obsession with racial origins has gone completely over the top.
My European ancestors can be traced in this country for at least
110 years so I find it absurd to be referred to as a European after
all this time. I'm also one-sixteenth Maori but even most Maori
would find it hilarious for me to insist on being called one of
the tangata whenua, especially in light of my more Irish than Irish
name and pale features.
It's time everyone did a bit of growing up. The Maori were here
first, despite the popular mythology surround the Moriori, and they
deserve to have democratically elected and accountable leaders to
best serve their needs in accordance with the traditional concept
of mana, as opposed to the self-serving rubbish that is now dubbed
"mana" by money-grabbing swine among Maori leaders.
It must also be faced by Maori that about half of the whites in
this country (and quite a fair number of Asians) have been here
at least three generations and simply don't have the option of going
back to the country of their ancestors. They too need to be accorded
some respect. They have earned the right to be called tangata whenua
and be accorded the same degree of respect as that which the Maori
have often demanded for themselves.
It's time to put away the genealogical charts, stop fussing over
whose ancestors came here in canoes and whose ancestors came over
by sailing ships, and to finally cut the ties with mother England.
Only then can we start to mature as a truly independent and sovereign
nation in which everyone here has a place and everyone has a contribution
to make.
Miles Lacey
Porirua |
| ************************ |
| Much
of the argument about cultural identity in this country
rests on a conflict between a sense of tradition which would preserve
the essential links of white culture to its European past and an opposing
"post-colonial" sense which would purge local writing habits
of Eurocentrism and privilege the indigenous tradition that is considered
more appropriate to a Pacific country. [Mark Williams: Leaving
the Highway: Six Contemporary New Zealand Novelists, p. 12] |
| ************************ |
| "There
are two landscapes to New Zealand, the Maori and the Pakeha
(European). I began writing and continue writing to ensure that the
Maori landscape of New Zealand is taken into account. I am Maori.
I write about Maori people. They are my commitment--and I am committed
not only in my writing, but also in my career and my whole life."
Witi Ihimaera [Contemporary Authors Online] |
| ************************ |
| Outward-looking,
innovative and ready for change, New Zealanders are open to adopting
ideas haphazardly, even if they strain our somewhat fragile traditions.
Being ready to change can be a virtue, giving us the oportunity to
overcome negative habits. However, New Zealand is also a place where
these new ideas can quickly become steel-trap orthodoxies, seized
upon and enforced with uncritical conformity....[T]hese could be the
symptoms of a society in a degree of crisis: is this how a small,
recently colonised group of islands deals with the issue of cultural
identity in the era of Americanisation and globalisation?
[David Young, New Zealand: Land and People, p. 4] |
| ************************ |
Along
with other former British colonies like Canada, Australia and South
Africa, this heart-stoppingly beautiful island nation tolerated indifferent
if not actually
inedible cooking for most of the last century. Many
of the half-million people who entered New Zealand between 1861 and
1881 were laborers accustomed to empty bellies in their European homelands.
("Hunger, the never-ending hunger," one
of them recalled in his journal.) When they had the chance for the
first time in their lives to eat as much as they wanted, they ate
roast meat. A great deal of it.
Old habits do, indeed, die hard. In the year ended in March 2003,
the Meat and Wool Innovation Economic Service estimates, New Zealanders
ate 217 pounds of meat apiece. But the gastronomic
revolution that transformed eating in
other English-speaking countries in the 1980's and 90's, propelling
London, Sydney and Vancouver into the ranks of the world's most celebrated
restaurant cities, has reached far-off New Zealand at last, and roast
mutton no longer
rules here. [R. W. Apple, Jr.: "The Other Down Under," NY
Times, 24Jan04] |
| ************************ |
| The
history of European presence in [New Zealand] is undeniably an ambiguous
one, marked by crimes and errors as well as good intentions and genuine,
if unsuccessful, attempts at creating a just society. One
of its chief strengths is surely the form of the English language
it has developed over time, drawing on the original stock
of settler dialects, modified by borrowings from Maori, taking in
a rich welter of influences from Europe, America, Australia, evolving
its own idiosyncratic habits and forms--above all, building up a body
of literature expressing and extending that idiom. [Mark Williams:
Leaving the Highway: Six Contemporary New Zealand Novelists,
p. 215] |
|
|