TY - JOUR
T1 - Theorizing Relationality
T2 - A Response to the Morphys
AU - Merlan, Francesca
PY - 2013/12
Y1 - 2013/12
N2 - In Anthropological Theory and Government Policy in Australia's Northern Territory: The Hegemony of the Mainstream (AA 115[2]:17187), Frances and Howard Morphy suggest that the interculturala concept I deployed in description and analysis of the relations between indigenous and other Australians in a Northern Territory town (Merlan 1998)and recent Australian government policy attempts to enforce change in indigenous communities are both aspects of a hegemonic mainstream. The alleged link between them is that neither I, nor the government, attribute sufficient autonomy to indigenous people and their ways of being. Interpreting the intercultural as the spaces where indigenous people interact with settler Australians, they propose instead a notion of relative autonomy of Yolngu people of northeast Arnhem Land with whom they have worked for several decades. They also suggest that the latter notion, basically an insistence on the distinctness of wider Australian and Yolngu societies, is useful for critiquing recent invasive policy. Here I address problems in their understanding of the concept of the intercultural that I deployed and in their attempt to reduce indigenous involvement in wider Australian social processes to zones through the notion of relative autonomy.
AB - In Anthropological Theory and Government Policy in Australia's Northern Territory: The Hegemony of the Mainstream (AA 115[2]:17187), Frances and Howard Morphy suggest that the interculturala concept I deployed in description and analysis of the relations between indigenous and other Australians in a Northern Territory town (Merlan 1998)and recent Australian government policy attempts to enforce change in indigenous communities are both aspects of a hegemonic mainstream. The alleged link between them is that neither I, nor the government, attribute sufficient autonomy to indigenous people and their ways of being. Interpreting the intercultural as the spaces where indigenous people interact with settler Australians, they propose instead a notion of relative autonomy of Yolngu people of northeast Arnhem Land with whom they have worked for several decades. They also suggest that the latter notion, basically an insistence on the distinctness of wider Australian and Yolngu societies, is useful for critiquing recent invasive policy. Here I address problems in their understanding of the concept of the intercultural that I deployed and in their attempt to reduce indigenous involvement in wider Australian social processes to zones through the notion of relative autonomy.
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=84888050300&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1111/aman.12045
DO - 10.1111/aman.12045
M3 - Comment/debate
SN - 0002-7294
VL - 115
SP - 637
EP - 638
JO - American Anthropologist
JF - American Anthropologist
IS - 4
ER -