Containing Queensland prickly pear : buffer zones, closer settlement, whiteness


Autoria(s): Frawley, Jodi
Data(s)

01/06/2014

Resumo

By 1925, the introduced prickly pear (Opuntia and Nopalea spp.) covered up to 60 million acres of Queensland and New South Wales in what was perceived as prime agricultural land. After 40 years of experimentation, all Queensland Government strategies had failed. Faced with this failure and a diminishing expectation that the land would ever be conquered, buffer zones were proposed by the newly formed Queensland Prickly Pear Land Commission. A close reading of government documents, newspaper reports and local histories about these buffer zones shows how settler anxieties over who could or should occupy the land shaped the kinds of strategies recommended and adopted in relation to this alien species. Physical and cultural techniques were used to manage the uneasy coexistence between prickly pear, on the one hand, and farmers and graziers on the other. Furthermore, this environmental history challenges the notion of racially homogenous closer settlement under the White Australia Policy, showing the many different kinds of livelihood and labour in prickly pear land in the 1920s.

Identificador

http://eprints.qut.edu.au/67009/

Publicador

Taylor & Francis Group

Relação

DOI:10.1080/14443058.2014.896824

Frawley, Jodi (2014) Containing Queensland prickly pear : buffer zones, closer settlement, whiteness. Journal of Australian Studies, 38(2), pp. 139-156.

Direitos

Copyright 2014 International Australian Studies Association

Fonte

School of Design; Creative Industries Faculty; Institute for Future Environments

Palavras-Chave #210300 HISTORICAL STUDIES #prickly pear #racial formations #population politics #invasive species #management #biopolitics
Tipo

Journal Article