ABSTRACT
Long argued by post-colonial scholarship, Indigenous sexualities have been variously cast as pathological and abject, or fetishized and exotiziced. In the Australian context, Aboriginal sexualities have never been granted a normalized, agentic visibility in the white Australian imaginary. Since the 1990s, however, there has been an increase of ‘sexy’ Aboriginal ‘stars’ in the Australian media. This newfound visibility invites fresh questions about race, beauty, appropriation and resistance, most particularly in ways that centres Aboriginal narratives: What does it mean to be visible and ‘mainstreamed’ in a media that ‘values diversity’, whilst denying sovereignty for Indigenous people? This question is significant in the Australian context, but also has relevance for rethinking race, sexuality and media representations in colonial contexts internationally. The paper explores this newfound exposure through the voices of two Australian Aboriginal women, Samantha Harris and Magnolia Maymaru. These women have come to national and international fame as celebrated models in a fashion industry priding itself on becoming more inclusive and multicultural. It focuses on their responses to journalists over the course of their careers, as well as how the stories construct beauty and Aboriginality. I draw on Indigenous feminist scholars, particularly the work of Irene Watson, who foreground the subject of sovereignty and remind us that discourses of multiculturalism have a charged meaning for Indigenous people. I also draw on the insights of Elizabeth Povinelli who considers how sexuality intersects with discourses of empire, and how Indigenous people employ ‘creative engagements’ with liberal multiculturalism. Positioning sovereignty and multiculturalism side by side, I reflect on how Samantha and Magnolia enact a sovereign sexuality, and what this might look like. Rather than fix colonial alterity or reproduce multicultural ‘inclusions’, their narratives skirt, sidestep and ‘dance’ with the discourses constructing their lives, attending to race while transcending its colonial limits.
Disclosure statement
No potential conflict of interest was reported by the authors.
Notes on contributor
Monique Mulholland is a lecturer in the Department of Sociology at The Flinders University of South Australia. Her current research interests include young people, 'pornification' and media representation; sexuality and race; queer theory; critical race theory; cultural studies and post-colonial theory. Her recent book is titled Young people and pornography: young people negotiate pornification (2013, Palgrave Macmillan), and recent article “Western sexy?”: the west, the rest and sexualised media (2017). Feminist media studies.
Notes
1. Several important studies include Barney’s work on Indigenous women music performers (Citation2010), and King’s exploration of Marriageability and Indigenous representation (Citation2007).
2. Indigenous Australians view this as an offensive term for describing their community. Aboriginal people or Aboriginal nations is the preferred term.
3. Longgrass is a term used by Indigenous people to describe ‘living rough’, homeless, or living on the fringes.