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Morality and Patriarchal White Sovereignty
Authors:Barbara Baird
Institution:1. Head, Department of Women's Studies , Flinders University , GPO Box 2100, Adelaide, South Australia , 5001 E-mail: barbara.baird@flinders.edu.au Bair0001@flinders.edu.au
Abstract:This article offers a reading of three separate stories of gang rapes that have been prominent in the Australian media since 2000. The men involved – an Indigenous leader, young Sydney men identified as Muslim and several ostensibly un-raced professional footballers, have been positioned through different legal outcomes, media representations and through a prominently deployed discourse of morality. The article locates the gang rape stories in mutual inter-relationship with the expression of racism in Australia and the performance of ‘patriarchal white sovereignty’ by the Australian state in the 2000s in the global climate since 11 September 2001. It argues that the politics of race and whiteness, and the protocols for their speaking, have been central in the telling of the rape stories. These stories of gang rape have also created differently racialized positions for women including some remarkably respectful mainstream representations of the women raped by non-white men. The article concludes that these stories perform a gendered and raced moral justification for the racist and colonialist policies of the Australian state, both within national borders and beyond, that characterized the national government led by Prime Minister John Howard (1996–2007).
Keywords:Australia  footballers  gender  media discourse  morality  race  rape  whiteness
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