Wednesday, July 19, 2023

That Dark Emu doco

So, I watched the ABC's The Dark Emu Story documentary last night.   I was happy that it gave considerable time to the detailed critique of the book and its "research":

In 2021, an academic rebuttal to Dark Emu was published: Farmers or Hunter-Gatherers? The Dark Emu Debate by anthropologist Peter Sutton and archeologist Keryn Walshe. Both authors appear in the documentary, arguing Pascoe ignored evidence that did not fit his case while over-emphasising evidence that did. Pascoe and Sutton come head-to-head in the film, debating definitions such as of the word “sophistication”.

“What’s wrong with being unsophisticated?” Sutton asks. “Why do you hold up a battle of sophistication as a kind of a solution to people, filling their racism?”

But, as you might expect, the pro-Pascoe side, including by such high profile figures as Marcia Langton, were given much, much more air time.  (Langton presented as particularly cranky and automatically dismissive of criticism.)

The documentary failed to mention some pertinent things which I am pretty sure would be true, such as  the book has sold so well partly because of uniformly uncritical endorsement by Education departments.

The main thing that the pro-side demonstrated, though, was that aboriginal academia and advocacy has spent the last couple of decades on a PR project to convince Australians that aboriginal society was (is?), as Sutton says, "sophisticated," and essentially the same as European society.  

But to do so, they really are on a post-modern project of co-opting terminology and applying it in a way that weakens meaning almost to the point of uselessness.   The most Pascoe-ian example is "agriculture", which Sutton is very adamant (based on his own work, I believe) is not the way to describe the aboriginal practices and belief as to how to encourage plant growth.   The other examples include the attempt to build excitement about rocks having been moved in a river so as to form fish traps by calling them "engineering".  Or "houses" that were small scale huts with construction techniques that were not, by any stretch of the imagination, complex.   (They chose some pretty tough wood and "surgically" removed it from trees with stone axes - I rolled my eyes.) 

But the big example that Langton kept using was talking about the "complex economies" to describe the fact that some items were traded between tribes - grinding rocks being the main example noted on the show.   

I'm sorry, but I'm not buying it.   As Sutton would presumably argue, you don't need to co-opt Western "sophistication" to respect aboriginal society.   It's the fakery in the attempt to do so that actually harms their cause, because (to take one example) people can see with their own eyes that one tribe handing over grinding rocks to another in exchange for something is not "sophisticated" or an "economy" in the same way - or scale - that many other societies have worked over the last few thousand years.   (I originally referred to "Western" economies, but really, the comparison with what was going on in at least parts of virtually any other continent is like chalk and cheese.)   


10 comments:

  1. The main thing that the pro-side demonstrated, though, was that aboriginal academia and advocacy has spent the last couple of decades on a PR project to convince Australians that aboriginal society was (is?), as Sutton says, "sophisticated," and essentially the same as European society.

    Which is obvious crap. European society i8s far more sophisticated for two obvious reasons: writing and mathematics. Without a hard copy record of prior thoughts it isn't possible to evolve sophisticated concepts. The history of Christianity is far more conceptually developed than any metaphysical mumbo jumbo a culture without writing is capable of. Mathematics is fundamental to our society, virtually all technologies at some point rely on the centuries long developments in mathematics. European society is many times more creative than indigenous society. Since WW2 European society has created more new things under the sun than all previous societies combined.

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  2. Relatedly, I happened to be googling ‘the oldest civilisations in the world’ yesterday, and several of the sites that turned up listed ‘Aboriginal Australians’ - and for no good reason. 40,000 - 80,000 years of occupancy of a continent is hugely impressive but has nothing to do with the markers of civilisation proper, most of which were conspicuous by their absence in pre-colonial Australia. At least one of these sites was MSM.

    It seems the Pascoe controversy has uncovered a latent prejudice against hunter gatherer society in general and Aboriginal Australian society in particular. There is no shame in hunter gatherer society; it’s a hugely stable lifestyle.

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  3. Incidentally, propaganda of this sort is all over the Melbourne Museum. It’s quite bizarre. In one exhibit they tell you that Aboriginals have ‘always’ been in Australia while at the same time the exhibition is meant to be showing you Australia far before human inhabitance (Gondwanaland).

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  4. "40,000 - 80,000 years of occupancy of a continent is hugely impressive"

    Even with that statement - I'm not entirely sure why it should be. I mean, Africa isn't know for publicity campaigns based on "visit the home of the first humans" does it?

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  5. The oldest civilization is nothing to crow about. I don't get why they make such a big deal about it. We don't even know if it is that old. The description of indigenous culture as a civilization is too ambitious. If I had to draw a line I would make the invention of writing and arithmetic. A very quick look at definitions points to the presence of cities, writing, and established laws and customs throughout the relevant region.

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  6. Yes - simply being a hunter gatherer clan in an area for a long time is not itself civilisation, and nothing unique. It does not even seem likely that Aboriginal clans have been inhabiting one area for the longest period - that distinction would surely go to certain African hunter gatherer tribes. Enough - Australia is an often harsh environment and being able to live here sustainably is achievement enough. For the vast majority of human existence, everyone was in hunter gatherer tribes. There is no shame in it.

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  7. Anonymous4:53 pm

    I’m sorry to ask, has this blog been hijackerd? This is an excellent post and way above SFB’s pay grade of usual delusional leftwing tripe.

    JC

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  8. "For the vast majority of human existence, everyone was in hunter gatherer tribes. There is no shame in it."

    The harsh environment? ~300,000 years ago there were Neandertals and Heidelbergensis surviving ice ages, hunting large prey, building shelters, and probably storing food for the winter months.

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  9. JC, I didn't give you permission to cast my pearl-like words before the swine of New Catallaxy. [John given honourable exemption from the "swine" by the way...:)]

    Anyway, it's true: if there are two issues on which I don't align with much of the Left, it's on a lot of indigenous politics (especially in Australia), and [trans]gender ideology (on which I would say I am pretty TERF friendly).

    I've written before that I always doubted Pascoe's work, and posted about Sutton's book when it came out and got publicity:

    https://opiniondominion.blogspot.com/2021/06/at-last-left-wing-academic-criticism-of.html

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  10. Anonymous12:47 pm

    Doofus

    I don’t need your permission. In any event I cited it was your post so stop being a drama queen.

    JC

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