TY - JOUR
T1 - Aboriginal music and passion
T2 - Interculturality and difference in Australian desert towns
AU - Ottosson, Åse
PY - 2010
Y1 - 2010
N2 - Aboriginal country, rock and reggae music makers in Central Australian desert communities often portray performances in regional white towns as desirable and rewarding occasions for engagements with a non-indigenous 'mainstream'. Aboriginal popular music is also often understood as a tool for a marginalised minority to 'talk back' to non-Aboriginal powers, or for 'sharing culture' to achieve greater cross-cultural understanding. This article investigates what actually takes place at local Aboriginal music events in the town of Alice Springs. It shows how they, in fact, become powerful occasions for enacting certain blackfella forms of sociability that reinforce relations of estrangement between non-Aboriginal and Aboriginal people and domains. Addressing the question how to account for the lived experience of racial and cultural formations without resorting to notions of bounded or pre-existing categories, the author proposes an approach to difference as relational at the outset that can accommodate multiple dimensions and inherent contradictions of intercultural lives.
AB - Aboriginal country, rock and reggae music makers in Central Australian desert communities often portray performances in regional white towns as desirable and rewarding occasions for engagements with a non-indigenous 'mainstream'. Aboriginal popular music is also often understood as a tool for a marginalised minority to 'talk back' to non-Aboriginal powers, or for 'sharing culture' to achieve greater cross-cultural understanding. This article investigates what actually takes place at local Aboriginal music events in the town of Alice Springs. It shows how they, in fact, become powerful occasions for enacting certain blackfella forms of sociability that reinforce relations of estrangement between non-Aboriginal and Aboriginal people and domains. Addressing the question how to account for the lived experience of racial and cultural formations without resorting to notions of bounded or pre-existing categories, the author proposes an approach to difference as relational at the outset that can accommodate multiple dimensions and inherent contradictions of intercultural lives.
KW - Aboriginal Australia
KW - Inter-cultural theory
KW - Popular music
KW - Race relations
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=77956783174&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1080/00141844.2010.503899
DO - 10.1080/00141844.2010.503899
M3 - Article
SN - 0014-1844
VL - 75
SP - 275
EP - 300
JO - Ethnos
JF - Ethnos
IS - 3
ER -