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The Magical Virtue of These Sharp ThingsColonialism, Mimesis and Knapped Bottle Glass Artefacts in AustraliaNSW National Parks and Wildlife Service, Sydney, Australia rodney.harrison{at}npws.nsw.gov.au Items of transformed material culture, in particular knapped bottle glass artefacts, have formed a focus for the archaeology of Aboriginal-settler contact in Australia. This article considers the idea of glass artefacts as skeuomorphsthrough the lens of Gells and Taussigs writings regarding mimesis and the construction of Other-ness in colonial relations. As in the case of Benjamins discussion of the photographic reproduction of artworks as a phase in the struggle between photography and painting associated with modernity, so in colonial contexts did the oscillations of mimesis and alterity begin to merge, so that the West began to alter itself as viewed through the eyes of its Others, and Aboriginal people to mimic themselves as alters of the West. It is in this strange oscillation of mimesis and alterity, within Taussigs nervous system itself, that the meaning of knapped bottle glass artefacts can be found to lie. The continued manufacture of formal traditional stone artefact types and the re-emergence of archaic forms in glass represents on one level a humorous gesturewhich provides insights into the ways in which Aboriginal people understood colonialism in radically different terms to the colonial West. On another level, it can be seen as a political and practical decision with implications for how we understand the agency of Aboriginal people in Australian colonial encounters.
Key Words: colonialism gesture knapped bottle glass artefacts mimesis skeuomorphs
Journal of Material Culture, Vol. 8, No. 3,
311-336 (2003) |
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