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Export quality : representing Fijian bodies and the economy of war

journal contribution
posted on 2011-04-01, 00:00 authored by Torika Bolatagici
Fijian bodies have become a valuable commodity in the economy of war. Remittances from workers overseas are Fiji’s largest income – exceeding that of tourism and sugar export. This essay examines historical and contemporary representations of the black male body that perpetuate the exploitation of Fijians by inscribing the Fijian male body as warrior, criminal and protector. Taking a multidisciplinary approach informed by sociology, cultural theory, Pacific studies, visual culture, feminist and post-colonial theory, my practice is the vehicle through which I address issues of neocolonial commodification of Fijian bodies. Through an analysis of my own staged photographs and vernacular images taken by Fijians working for private security military companies and British and US armies, I hope to challenge audiences to consider their own perceptions of Fijian agency and subjectivity. By theorising the politicisation of the black body and interrogating colonial representations of blackness, I argue that we can begin to create links between the historical and contemporary exploitation of Fijians and that at the essence of both is an underlying racial hierarchy and economic requirement for cheap and, arguably, expendable labour.

History

Journal

Asia Pacific viewpoint

Volume

52

Pagination

5 - 16

Location

Richmond, Vic.

ISSN

1360-7456

eISSN

1467-8373

Language

eng

Notes

Revision of paper previously presented at OCIS 2010 : Proceedings of the 4th Oceanic Conference on International Studies 2010, OCIS, [Auckland, N. Z.], pp. 1-21.

Publication classification

C1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Copyright notice

2011, Victoria University of Wellington

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