Mountains and black races: anthropology’s heterotopias in colonial East Timor

This paper explores the pivotal status of mountain spaces in the 19th-century imaginary of wild peoples and black races in island Oceania. It adopts the notion of ‘heterotopia’ in order to examine how arrangements of human difference and spatial alterity were productively brought together in racial...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Roque, Ricardo (author)
Format: article
Language:eng
Published: 2012
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10451/6850
Country:Portugal
Oai:oai:repositorio.ul.pt:10451/6850
Description
Summary:This paper explores the pivotal status of mountain spaces in the 19th-century imaginary of wild peoples and black races in island Oceania. It adopts the notion of ‘heterotopia’ in order to examine how arrangements of human difference and spatial alterity were productively brought together in racial anthropology and in colonial praxis. Taking the example of the Portuguese former colony of East Timor, the author argues that anthropological theories of ‘mountain Negroes’, local categories of ‘mountain enemies’ and experiences of colonial hostility were mutually reinforcing.