Terra Nullius: A Journey Through No One's Land

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New Press, 2007 - History - 248 pages

Long before the word "genocide" was coined, the British invasion of Australia had annihilated approximately nine-tenths of the continent's original population of Aborigines. The creation of white Australia depended upon the legal fiction of "terra nullius"--no man's land--the claim that Aboriginal lands were inhabited by people who would soon die out and who could be helped on the way to extinction if they lingered.


Sven Lindqvist, the widely acclaimed and internationally renowned author of "Exterminate All the Brutes" and A History of Bombing, brings his original sensibility to bear as he travels 7,000 miles through Australia in search of places where belief in the rights of the white man and the annihilation of the "lower races" were put into practice. While Australia continues to reckon with its violent past--echoed in the United States' treatment of Native Americans and Europe's colonization of other continents--Lindqvist evokes a shocking history in which young boys were kidnapped to dive for pearls, then whipped and abandoned when the bends ruined them for work; "half-caste" children were taken from their mothers; and natives were misdiagnosed with STDs, put in neck irons, and sent to internment camps on remote islands. Lindqvist also recalls the work of ethnologists who brought their own prejudices to bear in studying Aborigines as primitives close to the origins of civilization, later inspiring Freud and Durkheim. At the same time he describes a beautiful and strange land, sacred to the native people who had inhabited it for centuries and celebrated in a long tradition of richly symbolic art.


A movingly idiosyncratic travelogue and a powerful act of historical excavation, Terra Nullius is the illuminating and disturbing story of how "no man's land" became the province of the white man.


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Contents

Maps vi
3
The Secret of the Desert
13
To Kahlin Compound
55
Copyright

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About the author (2007)

Sven Lindqvist was born in Stockholm, Sweden on March 28, 1932. He wrote for the newspaper Dagens Nyheter before becoming a cultural attaché to the Swedish embassy in Beijing. He received a Ph.D. from Stockholm University in 1966. He wrote more than 30 books including A Proposal, Advertising Is Lethal, The Myth of Wu Tao-tzu, The Shadow, Land and Power in South America, Diary of a Lover, Diary of a Married Man, Bench Press, Desert Divers, Exterminate All the Brutes, Terra Nullius: A Journey Through No One's Land, and A History of Bombing. In 2012, he received the Lenin Prize. He died on May 14, 2019 at the age of 87.

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