During the 1970s a wave of 'counter-culture' people moved into
rural communities in many parts of Australia. This study focuses in
particular on the town of Kuranda in North Queensland and the
relationship between the settlers and the local Aboriginal
population, concentrating on a number of linked social dramas that
portrayed the use of both public and private space. Through their
public performances and in their everyday spatial encounters, these
people resisted the bureaucratic state but, in the process, they
also contributed to the cultivation and propagation of state
effects.
Rosita Henry is an Associate Professor of Anthropology and a
Fellow of the Cairns Institute, James Cook University, Australia.
She is coeditor of The Challenge of Indigenous Peoples: Spectacle
or Politics? (2011) and author of numerous articles on the
political anthropology of place and performance.
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