Picturing Political Community: From Subjects to Citizens

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Abstract

This themed issue aims to investigate the role of visual culture in defining, contesting and advancing ideas of Australian citizenship and its attendant rights, from white settlement to the present.Footnote1 Acknowledging, but looking beyond, the legal status of citizenship, these articles seek to explore the broader processes through which this cultural category is constituted and deployed. This question is timely in an era when global networks such as economic and business processes, communication, and the movement of people are increasingly interconnected, and yet simultaneously we see both the resurgence of hypernationalism, as well as the assertion of rights based on difference within, against and across the nation state. Important recent research has focused upon the role of visual culture within geopolitical processes, from climate change disaster to the impact of the Covid pandemic, and especially the challenges shared by many nations, such as new nationalisms, the escalation of anti-immigrant rhetoric, the revitalisation of white supremacist movements, economic inequality both domestically and globally, and threats to democracy such as ‘fake news’.Footnote2 Many of these global challenges have contributed to the recent interest in how visual culture helps to both assert and challenge the meanings of citizenship.
Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)183-194
Number of pages12
JournalAustralian Historical Studies
Volume54
Issue number2
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 4 May 2023

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