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Ben Silverstein Ben Silverstein i(10785788 works by)
Gender: Male
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BiographyHistory

Ben Silverstein is a Postdoctoral Research Fellow at the University of Sydney as part of an ARC Laureate Fellowship examining Race and Ethnicity in the Global South. He has published work on sovereignties, settler colonialism, and colonial government, and has written a book titled Governing Natives: Indirect Rule and Settler Colonialism in Australia’s North, published by Manchester University Press.

Most Referenced Works

Awards for Works

y separately published work icon Governing Natives : Indirect Rule and Settler Colonialism in Australia's North Manchester : Manchester University Press , 2018 19752460 2018 multi chapter work criticism

'In the 1930s, a series of crises transformed relationships between settlers and Aboriginal people in Australia’s Northern Territory. This book examines archives and texts of colonial administration to study the emergence of ideas and practices of indirect rule in this unlikely colonial situation. It demonstrates that the practice of indirect rule was everywhere an effect of Indigenous or ‘native’ people’s insistence on maintaining and reinventing their political formations, their refusal to be completely dominated, and their frustration of colonial aspirations to total control. These conditions of difference and contradiction, of the struggles of people in contact, produced a colonial state that was created both by settlers and by the ‘natives’ they sought to govern.

'By the late 1930s, Australian settlers were coming to understand the Northern Territory as a colonial formation requiring a new form of government. Responding to crises of social reproduction, public power, and legitimacy, they rethought the scope of settler colonial government by drawing on both the art of indirect rule and on a representational economy of Indigenous elimination to develop a new political dispensation that sought to incorporate and consume Indigenous production and sovereignties. This book locates Aboriginal history within imperial history, situating the settler colonial politics of Indigeneity in a broader governmental context. Australian settler governmentality, in other words, was not entirely exceptional; in the Northern Territory, as elsewhere, indirect rule emerged as part of an integrated, empire-wide repertoire of the arts of governing and colonising peoples.'

Source: Publisher's blurb.

2020 shortlisted The Australian Historical Association Awards W. K. Hancock Prize
Last amended 15 May 2018 17:58:53
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