公民身份
殖民主义
罪犯
政治
英联邦
国家(计算机科学)
空格(标点符号)
范围(计算机科学)
政治学
政治经济学
社会学
法学
历史
程序设计语言
哲学
语言学
计算机科学
算法
作者
Peter Scriver,Katharine Bartsch,Mohd Zamzuri Ab Rashid
出处
期刊:Fabrications
[Informa]
日期:2016-05-03
卷期号:26 (2): 133-157
被引量:3
标识
DOI:10.1080/10331867.2016.1183762
摘要
Though rarely acknowledged, cheap labour sourced through inter-colonial networks originating in British India was instrumental to the “European” exploration and development of colonial Australia in the decades that followed the initial convict-transportation era. Among others, so-called “Afghan” cameleers left their most permanent legacy in Australia’s networks of transcontinental communication and transport, which they first charted and then instrumentally assisted in building between the 1860s and 1920s. Arguably, it was these same networks that ultimately enabled the Australian nation-state to be formed. Beyond those indelible infrastructural traces, however, this paper focuses in particular on the more enigmatic built evidence of these Muslim pioneers and their attempt to establish a foothold in Australia’s burgeoning towns and cities in the early twentieth century. We consider how this humble architectural fabric – built and projected – supported their comparatively vast commercial and communal networks, and how it also asserted the cameleer’s presumed right to citizenship within the emerging Australian Commonwealth. To build was both a practical and a political statement of the intention to dwell, we argue, in a space of opportunity and potential citizenship that was – from the cameleers’ purview as subjects of the greater British world-system – truly “imperial” in scale as well as scope for cultural diversity.
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