Spirit of enterprise


Autoria(s): Bolatagici, Torika
Data(s)

01/01/2009

Resumo

Remittances from Fijian workers overseas are the nation’s largest income – exceeding that of tourism and sugar. Fijian bodies have become a valuable export commodity in the increasingly privatised economy of war. Coco Fusco writes that from the 18th Century, texts have “reduced people of colour to the corporeal, whiteness was understood as a spirit that manifests itself in a dynamic relation to the physical world. Whiteness, then, does not need to be made visible to present an image; it can be expressed as the spirit of enterprise, as the power to organise the material world, and as an expansive relation to the environment.” This work asks where black and white bodies fit within this new economy of war…who is visible and who is invisible? Whose bodies are commodities and who embodies the spirit of enterprise?<br /><input type="hidden" id="gwProxy" /><!--Session data--><input type="hidden" onclick="jsCall();" id="jsProxy" /><div id="refHTML"></div><input type="hidden" id="gwProxy" /><!--Session data--><input type="hidden" id="jsProxy" onclick="jsCall();" /><div id="refHTML"></div>

Identificador

http://hdl.handle.net/10536/DRO/DU:30025581

Idioma(s)

eng

Publicador

Bus Projects

Relação

http://dro.deakin.edu.au/eserv/DU:30025581/torika-enterprise-2009.pdf

Tipo

Conference, Exhibition or Event