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“Nuclear consumed love”: atomic threats and Australian indigenous activist poetics

Version 2 2024-06-18, 05:17
Version 1 2017-11-23, 23:01
journal contribution
posted on 2024-06-18, 05:17 authored by M Hall
This essay will examine the polemic and poetic means through which three Indigenous Australian writers discuss the repercussions and risks associated with nuclear power, waste and weaponry as an existential and material threat to the mythopoeic creation stories, totemic systems and landforms which sustain Indigenous Australian belief. This essay will follow the establishment of a media ecology through which discourses of technological harm in Oodgeroo Noonuccal’s “No More Boomerang” lay the foundation for Australian Indigenous anti-nuclear activist poetics and highlights the relationship between language, belief and technology. Oodgeroo’s [Kath Walker] “No More Boomerang” will be read as a precursor to the experimental expression of Lionel Fogarty’s “Foot Walking and Talking - Atomic Confusion” as well as the procedural methodologies behind Natalie Harkin’s “Zero Tolerance.” It will be argued that Indigenous-led representations of nuclear weaponry as an ontologic-existential threat can only be properly critiqued when framed through the constructs of race, nationhood and the history of colonization in Australia.

History

Journal

Angelaki - Journal of the Theoretical Humanities

Volume

22

Pagination

51-62

Location

Abingdon, Eng.

ISSN

0969-725X

Indigenous content

This research output may contain the names and images of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people now deceased. We apologise for any distress that may occur.

Language

eng

Publication classification

C1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Copyright notice

2017, Informa UK

Issue

3 : nuclear theory degree zero: essays against the nuclear android

Publisher

Routledge