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Journal of Sociology
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Cultures of complaint

An ethnography of rural racial rivalry

Gillian K. Cowlishaw

University of Technology, Sydney

This article was inspired by ethnographic observation of interaction, arguments and ideologies in Bourke, New South Wales, and the contrast with the nation’s public debates. Whereas the prevailing national orthodoxy accords Aborigines the status of injured victims of history, local Whites claim present injury from these same victims. The former diagnosis tends towards a dismissal of rural whitefellas’ complaints as ‘redneck’ racism, but the moral and political implications become more complicated and contentious the closer one gets to the lived realities of race relations. I argue that there is a symbolic rivalry about the contrasting moral worth of racial identities that are built around experiences of derogation and desperation. Finally I discuss two major weaknesses in our intellectual imaginations concerning the relationships between Australian citizens with Indigenous and immigrant origins.

Key Words: historical injury • Indigeneity • race relations • racial identities • racial rivalry • Whiteness

Journal of Sociology, Vol. 42, No. 4, 429-445 (2006)
DOI: 10.1177/1440783306069999


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