ABSTRACT

This book analyses the anxiety "well-intentioned" settler Australian women experience when engaging with Indigenous politics. Drawing upon cultural theory and studies of affect and emotion, Slater argues that settler anxiety is an historical subjectivity which shapes perception and senses of belonging. Why does Indigenous political will continue to provoke and disturb? How does settler anxiety inform public opinion and "solutions" to Indigenous inequality? In its rigorous interrogation of the dynamics of settler colonialism, emotions and ethical belonging, Anxieties of Belonging has far-reaching implications for understanding Indigenous-settler relations.

chapter 1|30 pages

Introducing Anxieties of Settler Belonging

chapter 2|20 pages

Love and Complicity

chapter 3|19 pages

Desiring Belonging

chapter 4|18 pages

Waiting on the Ground of Impossibility

chapter 5|19 pages

This Is Not a Gift

chapter 6|22 pages

Not Caring Like the State