Searching for certainty in purity: Indigenous fundamentalism

Abstract

Indigenous resistance to colonial hegemony developed as one based on a politics of difference. This strategic construction of difference relied on the notion of culture to establish a discursive space to articulate the political demands of the subjugated Indigenous minority. This seminar interrogates the less liberatory impulses of such political constructions of identity and culture. I contend that indigenous responses to colonization that are based on a politics of difference have the potential to, and in particular instances do, invoke the notion of culture and identity as an oppressive site of authority in a way that is, in practice, fundamentalist.

 

Braden Hill is an associate lecturer at Murdoch University.

Date & time

Wed 28 May 2014, 12.30–2pm

Location

Hanna Neumann Building Room G058 (near Union), The Australian National University

Speakers

Braden Hill

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