The Proclamation Island Moment: Making Antarctica Australian

It is January 1930 and the restless Southern Ocean is heaving itself up against the frozen coast of Eastern Antarctica as the exploring ship Discovery shoves its way through the pack. One of the key moments of the British, Australian, and New Zealand Antarctic Research Expedition (BANZARE)—is about...

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Main Author: Collis, Christy
Format: Text
Language:unknown
Published: University of Queensland 2005
Subjects:
Online Access:https://research.usq.edu.au/item/q75qy/the-proclamation-island-moment-making-antarctica-australian
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spelling ftusqland:oai:research.usq.edu.au:q75qy 2023-05-15T13:48:06+02:00 The Proclamation Island Moment: Making Antarctica Australian Collis, Christy 2005 https://research.usq.edu.au/item/q75qy/the-proclamation-island-moment-making-antarctica-australian unknown University of Queensland The University of Queensland Press Collis, Christy. 2005. "The Proclamation Island Moment: Making Antarctica Australian." Carter, David and Crotty, Martin (ed.) Australian Studies Centre 25th Anniversary Collection. Saint Lucia, Australia. University of Queensland. pp. 184-197 Australian Antarctic Territory edited PeerReviewed 2005 ftusqland 2023-01-03T11:58:42Z It is January 1930 and the restless Southern Ocean is heaving itself up against the frozen coast of Eastern Antarctica as the exploring ship Discovery shoves its way through the pack. One of the key moments of the British, Australian, and New Zealand Antarctic Research Expedition (BANZARE)—is about to occur: the expedition is about to succeed in its primary mission. Douglas Mawson, the expedition's Australian leader, ascends to the island's bleak summit. There, he and his crew assemble a mound of stones and insert into it the flagpole they’ve carried with them across the ocean. Mawson reads an official proclamation of territorial annexation, the photographer Hurley shoots the moment on film, and one of the men hauls the Union Jack up the pole. In the freezing wind, the men take off their hats and sing 'God Save the King.' They deposit a copy of the proclamation into a metal canister and affix this to the flagpole. The men row back to the Discovery; Mawson returns to his cabin and writes up the event. A crucial moment in Antarctica's spatial history has occurred: on what Mawson has aptly named Proclamation Island, Antarctica has been produced as Australian space. But how, exactly, does this production of Antarctica as a spatial possession work? How does this moment initiate the transformation of six million square kilometres of Antarctica—42% of the continent—into Australian space? The answer to this question lies in three separate, but articulated cultural technologies: representation, the body of the explorer, and international territorial law. This article attends to the ways in which these spatialising forces together 'nationalise' Antarctica by transforming it into Australian national space. Mawson’s BANZARE performance on Proclamation Island is a moment in which the legal, the physical, and the textual clearly intersect in the creation of space as a national possession. Australia did not take possession of forty-two percent of Antarctica after BANZARE by law, by exploration, or by representation alone. The ... Text Antarc* Antarctic Antarctica Proclamation Island Southern Ocean University of Southern Queensland: USQ ePrints Antarctic Australian Antarctic Territory Hurley ENVELOPE(51.350,51.350,-66.283,-66.283) New Zealand Proclamation Island ENVELOPE(53.683,53.683,-65.850,-65.850) Southern Ocean
institution Open Polar
collection University of Southern Queensland: USQ ePrints
op_collection_id ftusqland
language unknown
topic Australian Antarctic Territory
spellingShingle Australian Antarctic Territory
Collis, Christy
The Proclamation Island Moment: Making Antarctica Australian
topic_facet Australian Antarctic Territory
description It is January 1930 and the restless Southern Ocean is heaving itself up against the frozen coast of Eastern Antarctica as the exploring ship Discovery shoves its way through the pack. One of the key moments of the British, Australian, and New Zealand Antarctic Research Expedition (BANZARE)—is about to occur: the expedition is about to succeed in its primary mission. Douglas Mawson, the expedition's Australian leader, ascends to the island's bleak summit. There, he and his crew assemble a mound of stones and insert into it the flagpole they’ve carried with them across the ocean. Mawson reads an official proclamation of territorial annexation, the photographer Hurley shoots the moment on film, and one of the men hauls the Union Jack up the pole. In the freezing wind, the men take off their hats and sing 'God Save the King.' They deposit a copy of the proclamation into a metal canister and affix this to the flagpole. The men row back to the Discovery; Mawson returns to his cabin and writes up the event. A crucial moment in Antarctica's spatial history has occurred: on what Mawson has aptly named Proclamation Island, Antarctica has been produced as Australian space. But how, exactly, does this production of Antarctica as a spatial possession work? How does this moment initiate the transformation of six million square kilometres of Antarctica—42% of the continent—into Australian space? The answer to this question lies in three separate, but articulated cultural technologies: representation, the body of the explorer, and international territorial law. This article attends to the ways in which these spatialising forces together 'nationalise' Antarctica by transforming it into Australian national space. Mawson’s BANZARE performance on Proclamation Island is a moment in which the legal, the physical, and the textual clearly intersect in the creation of space as a national possession. Australia did not take possession of forty-two percent of Antarctica after BANZARE by law, by exploration, or by representation alone. The ...
format Text
author Collis, Christy
author_facet Collis, Christy
author_sort Collis, Christy
title The Proclamation Island Moment: Making Antarctica Australian
title_short The Proclamation Island Moment: Making Antarctica Australian
title_full The Proclamation Island Moment: Making Antarctica Australian
title_fullStr The Proclamation Island Moment: Making Antarctica Australian
title_full_unstemmed The Proclamation Island Moment: Making Antarctica Australian
title_sort proclamation island moment: making antarctica australian
publisher University of Queensland
publishDate 2005
url https://research.usq.edu.au/item/q75qy/the-proclamation-island-moment-making-antarctica-australian
long_lat ENVELOPE(51.350,51.350,-66.283,-66.283)
ENVELOPE(53.683,53.683,-65.850,-65.850)
geographic Antarctic
Australian Antarctic Territory
Hurley
New Zealand
Proclamation Island
Southern Ocean
geographic_facet Antarctic
Australian Antarctic Territory
Hurley
New Zealand
Proclamation Island
Southern Ocean
genre Antarc*
Antarctic
Antarctica
Proclamation Island
Southern Ocean
genre_facet Antarc*
Antarctic
Antarctica
Proclamation Island
Southern Ocean
op_relation Collis, Christy. 2005. "The Proclamation Island Moment: Making Antarctica Australian." Carter, David and Crotty, Martin (ed.) Australian Studies Centre 25th Anniversary Collection. Saint Lucia, Australia. University of Queensland. pp. 184-197
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