Hegemonic settler-colonial structure: Difference between revisions
Amwelladmin (talk | contribs) No edit summary |
Amwelladmin (talk | contribs) No edit summary |
||
Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
{{a|work||}}{{quote|“Here, breaking is a space for those ‘othered’ by Australian institutions to express themselves and engage in new hierarchies of respect. We argue that breaking’s institutionalization via the Olympics will place breaking more firmly within this sporting nation’s '''hegemonic settler-colonial structures''' that rely upon racialized and gendered hierarchies.” | {{a|work||}}{{quote|“Here, breaking is a space for those ‘othered’ by Australian institutions to express themselves and engage in new hierarchies of respect. We argue that breaking’s institutionalization via the Olympics will place breaking more firmly within this sporting nation’s '''hegemonic settler-colonial structures''' that rely upon racialized and gendered hierarchies.” | ||
:—{{plainlink|https://researchers.mq.edu.au/en/persons/rachael-gunn|Dr Rachael Gunn}}, ''The Australian breaking scene and the Olympic Games: The possibilities and politics of sportification'', September 2023 <ref>Department of Media, Communications, Creative Arts, Language and Literature, Macquarie University. Aka “Bgirl Raygun”</ref>}} | :—{{plainlink|https://researchers.mq.edu.au/en/persons/rachael-gunn|Dr Rachael Gunn}}, ''The Australian breaking scene and the Olympic Games: The possibilities and politics of sportification'', September 2023 <ref>Department of Media, Communications, Creative Arts, Language and Literature, Macquarie University. Aka “Bgirl Raygun”</ref>}} | ||
{{d|Hegemonic settler-colonial structure|/ˌhiːɡɪˈmɒnɪk kəˈləʊniəl | {{d|Hegemonic settler-colonial structure|/ˌhiːɡɪˈmɒnɪk sɛtlə-kəˈləʊniəl ˈstrʌkʧə/|n}} | ||
A system where a dominant group (often from a colonising country) establishes control over a territory and its indigenous population.<ref>Thank-you Bing AI.</ref> | A system where a dominant group (often from a colonising country) establishes control over a territory and its indigenous population.<ref>Thank-you Bing AI.</ref> | ||
Revision as of 10:31, 13 August 2024
Office anthropology™
|
“Here, breaking is a space for those ‘othered’ by Australian institutions to express themselves and engage in new hierarchies of respect. We argue that breaking’s institutionalization via the Olympics will place breaking more firmly within this sporting nation’s hegemonic settler-colonial structures that rely upon racialized and gendered hierarchies.”
- —Dr Rachael Gunn, The Australian breaking scene and the Olympic Games: The possibilities and politics of sportification, September 2023 [1]
Hegemonic settler-colonial structure
/ˌhiːɡɪˈmɒnɪk sɛtlə-kəˈləʊniəl ˈstrʌkʧə/ (n.)
A system where a dominant group (often from a colonising country) establishes control over a territory and its indigenous population.[2]
“Hegemonic”, we suppose because a group becomes dominant and imposes cultural, economic, and political influence, on the values, norms, and systems of a subordinate group. In any case, some pre-existing power structure whose existing mechanisms impose political order and hierarchy on a “society” of some sort.
“Colonial” suggests the hegemony then involuntarily appropriates and exploits the society’s cultural artefacts and resources.
“Settler” because the Colonial hegemonists do not just cut and run: they settle on the society’s territory and exclude the indigenous population from its own homeland.
Bing AI tells us:
“This structure often leads to long-term social, economic, and political inequalities, with the indigenous population facing marginalization and loss of their land, culture, and autonomy.”
Worked example
Dr Gunn highlighted a real possibility of this happening should “Breaking” be introduced to the Paris Olympics. so it is interesting to see the colonial-settler hegemony at work.
See also
- Fox Sport Australia’s backgrounder to Breaking’s inclusion in the 2024 Olympics
- Critical theory