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This book maps the seascape borders of Australia's insular imagination. It explores how the boundaries and contours of the nation were made and remade in the first years of the war on terror, offering a striking reassessment of the territoriality of 'the island continent'.Girt by Sea 'A Nation Contained Within a Beach' Boats, Bodies and Borderscapes The Bombing on Kuta Beach The Good Neighbor: Tsunami 2004 Racial Horizons and Peacekeeping in the Pacific Clearing the Waters A Very Australian Pogrom
This is a gentle but intensely provocative book which sets out to map the seascape borders of Australia s insular imagination. It has the potential to be part of the redefinition of the meaning of Australia as an island-continent. - Paul James, Director of the Global Cities Institute, RMIT
In Australia and the Insular Imagination, Perera shows in fascinating detail the determining role of the ideology of the insular on the ways in which Australia has been imagined in contemporary political and cultural discourses.This is cultural studies at its best: historically grounded, theoretically sharp, and always alert to nuance and implication. - Peter Hulme, Professor in Literature, University of Essex
Perera s book comes as a bolt of lightning to the increasingly stolid, and conservative, world of Australian Studies. Where the conventional approach has been to comment on the ways that the land has been constructed and worked over by colonial settlers, Perera offers a powerful and compelling understanding of the importance of the sea in the Australian imaginary and offers also a basis for critically engaging with recent political practices. While this is a book about Australia, the topics covered, such as race, asylum seekers, (post)coloniality, and identity, are all of importance in other societies descended from the British colonial order - including the United States, Canada, and Britain itself. In common with many of the best clCÏ
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