Race and the Modern Exotic: Three 'Australian' Women on Global Display

Paperback / softback

Main Details

Title Race and the Modern Exotic: Three 'Australian' Women on Global Display
Authors and Contributors      By (author) Angela Woollacott
Physical Properties
Format:Paperback / softback
Pages:180
Dimensions(mm): Height 234,Width 153
ISBN/Barcode 9781921867125
ClassificationsDewey:305.4209421
Audience
General
Illustrations illustrations

Publishing Details

Publisher Monash University Publishing
Imprint Monash University Publishing
Publication Date 1 October 2011
Publication Country Australia

Description

Annette Kellerman, Rose Quong and Merle Oberon were internationally successful Australian performers of the first half of the twentieth century. Kellerman was a swimmer, diver, lecturer, and silent-film star, Quong an actor, lecturer and writer who forged a career in London and New York, and Oberon one of the most celebrated film stars of the 1930s and 1940s, first in London and then Hollywood. Through her international vaudeville performances and film roles, Kellerman played with the quasi-racial identity of South Sea Islander. Quong built a career based on her own body, through a careful appropriation of Orientalism. Her body was the signifier of her Chinese authenticity, the essentialist foundation for her constructed, diasporic Chinese identity. The official story of Oberons origins was that she was Tasmanian. However, this was a publicity story concocted at the beginning of her film career to mask her lower-class, Anglo-Indian birth. Despite anxious undercurrents about her exoticism, Australians were thrilled to claim a true Hollywood star as one of their own. These three women performers created newly modern, racially ambiguous Australian femininities.Racial thinking was at the core of White Australian culture: far from being oblivious to racial hierarchies and constructions, Australians engaged with them on an everyday basis. Around the world, Australian stars represented a white-settler nation, a culture in which white privilege was entrenched, during a period replete with legal forms of discrimination based on race. The complex meanings attached to three successful Australian performers in this period of highly articulated racism thus become a popular cultural archive we can investigate to learn more about contemporary connections between race, exoticism and gender on the global stage and screen.

Author Biography

Angela Woollacott is the Manning Clark Professor of History, and Head of the School of History, at the Australian National University. She works in the fields of Australian history, British Empire history, and feminist and postcolonial history. Her books include On Her Their Lives Depend: Munitions Workers in the Great War (1994); To Try Her Fortune in London: Australian Women, Colonialism and Modernity (2001); and Gender and Empire (2006).