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Corpus Australis and Settler Colonialism: Land and Body Politics in Australian Settler Colonists’ Dances and Other Performances of the Postcolonial

thesis
posted on 2021-04-15, 22:48 authored by LUKE AARON FORBES
Corpus Australis and Settler Colonialism reviews recurring settler-colonialist themes in settler colonists’ theatrical dances and discourse on dance-related topics to demonstrate how “the postcolonial” is deployed as an apologia for settler-colonial action in dance contexts. The thesis scrutinises most closely settler colonist dance professionals’ and commentators’ representations of “Australian” lands and autochthonous bodies from the 1980s onward. It argues that such “performances” are postcolonising, possessive claims to corpus australis. It reveals the ways dancing and dance scholarship can be vehicles through which settler colonists imagine how their bodies (of thought) interact with and govern Indigenous “Others” and lands.

History

Principal supervisor

Stacy Holman Jones

Additional supervisor 1

Maryrose Casey

Additional supervisor 2

John Bradley

Additional supervisor 3

Misha Myers

Year of Award

2021

Department, School or Centre

The Sir Zelman Cowen School of Music and Performance

Additional Institution or Organisation

Theatre and Performance

Course

Doctor of Philosophy

Degree Type

DOCTORATE

Campus location

Australia

Faculty

Faculty of Arts