By drawing forensic attention to the structural conditions under which free speech debates appear as debates, both the impossibility and necessity for speaking, writing, and being heard in colonial Australia becomes visible. This is a rich collection of voices, united in their ability to carve out ways forward from this impasse by offering critique and decolonial vision in equal measure. The collection powerfully demonstrates the role of anti-colonial critique in forging new paths beyond the persisting lie of terra nullius.
Maria Giannacopoulos, University of South Australia
Free speech conflicts are a recurring feature of highly mediatised and irreducibly multicultural publics. This exceptional collection of essays transcends the comforting circularity of normative debates about the limits of speech to examine how and why freedom of speech has come to act as such a productive site of antagonism. Ranging across writing styles and critical approaches, every single essay is perceptive. Taken together, they provide us with a cumulative project of significant theoretical innovation, and keen contemporary insight.
Gavan Titley, Maynooth University
The beautiful concepts valorised in the western world, like tolerance, democracy and free speech, are like the valorised beautiful lifestyles and privileges that come with them, enmeshed in the ongoing colonial, practical and symbolic violence that is their condition of production. The authors of this book, collectively and individually, take the concept of free speech, shatter the vitrine of sublime concepts where it is positioned, and lay bare its aggressive colonial kernel. This makes for essential reading.
Ghassan Hage, University of Melbourne
Unsettled Voices
From resurgent racisms to longstanding Islamophobia, from settler colonial refusals of First Nations voices to border politics and migration debates, free speech has been weaponized to target racialized communities and bolster authoritarian rule. Unsettled Voices identifies the severe limitations and the violent consequences of free speech debates typical of contemporary cultural politics, and explores the possibilities for combating racism when liberal values underpin emboldened white supremacy.
What kind of everyday racially motivated speech is protected by such an interpretation of liberal ideology? How do everyday forms of social expression that vilify and intimidate find shelter through an inflation of the notion of freedom of speech? Furthermore, how do such forms refuse the idea that language can be a performative act from which harm can be derived? Racialized speech has conjured and shaped the subjectivities of multiple intersecting participants, reproducing new and problematic forms of precarity. These vulnerabilities have been experienced from the sound of rubber bullets in the Occupied Palestinian Territories to UK hate speech legislation, to the spontaneous performance of a First Nations war dance on the Australian Rules football pitch.
This book identifies the deep limitations and the violent consequences of the longstanding and constantly developing free speech debates typical of so many contexts in the West, and explores the possibilities for combating racism when liberal values are weaponized to target racialized communities.
This book was originally published as a special issue of Continuum: Journal of Media & Cultural Studies.
Tanja Dreher is Scientia Associate Professor in Media at the University of New South Wales, Sydney, Australia. Tanjas research focuses on the politics of listening in the context of media and resurgent racisms, Indigenous sovereignties and intersectional feminism.
Michael R. Griffiths is Senior Lecturer in English and Writing at the University of Wollongong, Australia. He is the author of The Distribution of Settlement: Appropriation and Refusal in Australian Literature and Culture (2018). His essays have appeared in Discourse, Postcolonial Studies, Australian Humanities Review and many other venues. He is an active participant in the Jindaola Projectan initiative on decolonizing curriculum within the University of Wollongong.
Timothy Laurie is Lecturer in the School of Communication at the University of Technology Sydney, Australia. His core research interests include cultural theory, gender and sexuality studies, and philosophy, and he is Managing Editor of Continuum: Journal of Media & Cultural Studies. Currently, Timothy is co-authoring a book with Dr Hannah Stark on love and politics.
Unsettled Voices
Beyond Free Speech in the Late Liberal Era
Edited by
Tanja Dreher, Michael R. Griffiths and Timothy Laurie
First published 2021
by Routledge
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Introduction, Chapters 17, 911 and Afterword 2021 Taylor & Francis
Chapter 8 2018 Anshuman A. Mondal. Originally published as Open Access.
With the exception of Chapter 8, no part of this book may be reprinted or reproduced or utilised in any form or by any electronic, mechanical, or other means, now known or hereafter invented, including photocopying and recording, or in any information storage or retrieval system, without permission in writing from the publishers. For details on the rights for Chapter 8, please see the chapters Open Access footnote.
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ISBN: 978-0-367-48579-5 (hbk)
ISBN: 978-1-003-04172-6 (ebk)
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The publisher accepts responsibility for any inconsistencies that may have arisen during the conversion of this book from journal articles to book chapters, namely the inclusion of journal terminology.
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Every effort has been made to contact copyright holders for their permission to reprint material in this book. The publishers would be grateful to hear from any copyright holder who is not here acknowledged and will undertake to rectify any errors or omissions in future editions of this book.
Contents
Tanja Dreher, Michael R. Griffiths and Timothy Laurie
Alana Lentin
Chelsea Bond, Bryan Mukandi and Shane Coghill
Randa Abdel-Fattah and Mehal Krayem
Micaela Sahhar and Michael R. Griffiths
Poppy de Souza
Yassir Morsi
Evelyn Araluen Corr
Anshuman A. Mondal
Anne Surma
Behrouz Boochani
Omid Tofighian
Timothy Laurie, Tanja Dreher, Michael R. Griffiths and Omid Tofighian
The chapters in this book were originally published in Continuum: Journal of Media & Cultural Studies