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Nervous nation: Fear, conflict and narratives of fortified domestic architecture on the Queensland frontier
- Source :
- Aboriginal History Journal. 44:21-57
- Publication Year :
- 2021
- Publisher :
- ANU Press, 2021.
-
Abstract
- The frontier of nineteenth- and twentieth-century Australia was a place in which colonists routinely lived in fear of retaliation by the Aboriginal peoples whose traditional lands they had forcibly dispossessed. It has been suggested this concern manifested itself in domestic architecture, in both active and passive defensive strategies designed to afford protection against various forms of potential attack. Yet there remains a lack of substantive research to support such assertions. In this article, we present an analysis of accounts drawn from a range of sources of 97 domestic structures across Queensland with claims for defensive features. Although suggesting that fortified domestic structures were more common than previously envisaged, our review indicates that defensive features were usually minimal – holes in walls and barrable doors, windows or other ports of entry – reflecting the often expedient nature of the structures themselves. First-hand accounts of these buildings are rare, although not entirely absent, with most written accounts being reminiscences told in hindsight by later descendants, resulting in both distortions and myth-building. Accounts of fortified domestic structures peak in the decades following Federation and through both World Wars as the newly minted Australian nation explicitly engaged in nation-building and constructing the ‘glorious pioneer’ narrative.
- Subjects :
- 050402 sociology
History
business.industry
Project commissioning
05 social sciences
06 humanities and the arts
060104 history
Frontier
0504 sociology
Publishing
Political economy
Literary criticism
0601 history and archaeology
Narrative
Architecture
General Agricultural and Biological Sciences
business
Hindsight bias
Subjects
Details
- ISSN :
- 18379389 and 03148769
- Volume :
- 44
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- Aboriginal History Journal
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi...........58a482392fe1fef5050d9e9ecac88a00
- Full Text :
- https://doi.org/10.22459/ah.44.2020.02