Loading…

Developing a holistic and collaborative approach for the archaeology of Australian South Sea Islanders in Queensland

ABSTRACT Australian South Sea Islanders are a distinctive cultural group comprising descendants of over 60000 labourers who came to Australia from Vanuatu, Solomon Islands and elsewhere in the Western Pacific between 1863 and 1904. “Blackbirded” labourers were commonly referred to as victims of a sl...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Published in:Archaeology in Oceania 2024-10, Vol.59 (3), p.435-449
Main Authors: Miller, Imelda, Youse, Zia, Bickey, Tomasina, Haddow, Eve, Mate, Geraldine, Zubrzycka, Adele, Prangnell, Jonathan, Fairbairn, Andrew, Robinson, Helena, Baumgartl, Thomas, Flexner, James L.
Format: Article
Language:English
Subjects:
Citations: Items that this one cites
Online Access:Get full text
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
Description
Summary:ABSTRACT Australian South Sea Islanders are a distinctive cultural group comprising descendants of over 60000 labourers who came to Australia from Vanuatu, Solomon Islands and elsewhere in the Western Pacific between 1863 and 1904. “Blackbirded” labourers were commonly referred to as victims of a slave trade, though many also came voluntarily to work in the sugar plantations of northern New South Wales and Queensland. The advent of racist exclusionary immigration policies introduced from 1901 further forced South Sea Islanders to the margins of colonial society. Yet many Australian South Sea Islanders would argue their untold history speaks to resilience and overcoming adversity. Australian South Sea Islanders have a distinctive cultural heritage, including material culture, oral traditions embedded in the landscape and connections to places – from sugar mills to domestic sites – revealed archaeologically. This heritage must be approached sensitively given its association with sometimes difficult histories but is crucial to understanding the contributions of Australian South Sea Islanders to Australian society, contemporary communities and identities, and historical and social significance across multiple scales. Collaborative research with Australian South Sea Islanders pushes the boundaries of “community archaeology” by taking a slow approach to research, reframing ethnographic objects and cultural landscapes, and producing an archaeology that can include many voices. RÉSUMÉ Les Insulaires australiens du Pacifique Sud forment un groupe culturel distinct composé des descendants de plus de 60 000 travailleurs installés en Australie provenant du Vanuatu, des Îles Salomon, et ailleurs dans le Pacifique Ouest entre 1863 et 1904. Les travailleurs issus du « blackbirding » sont généralement considérés comme victimes de l'esclavage, mais nombreux se sont engagés volontairement pour travailler dans les plantations de canne à sucre du nord de la Nouvelle‐Galles du Sud et du Queensland. L'avènement de politiques d'immigration excluantes et racistes, introduites à partir de 1901, a contraint les Insulaires australiens du Pacifique Sud à rester en marge de la société coloniale. Parmi eux, nombreux sont ceux qui peuvent affirmer que leur histoire méconnue témoigne de leur résilience et de leur capacité à surmonter l'adversité. Les Insulaires australiens du Pacifique Sud possèdent un patrimoine culturel distinctif, dont une culture matérielle spécifique, des traditions
ISSN:0728-4896
1834-4453
DOI:10.1002/arco.5330