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Maps drawn on the sand: of mimicry and depropriation on Ludwig Leichhardt's second Australian expedition

  • In this essay, I explore various politics of mimicry on Ludwig Leichhardt's second Australian expedition. Following Michael Taussig, I read mimicry as embedded in a complex economy of gift exchange which disrupts the binary categories of self and other, subject and object, man and nature. Mimetic exchanges, in other words, bear the potential for a non-dualistic dynamics of depropriation, a dynamics which may be avowed or disavowed by various actors in the colonial encounter. Focussing on three actors in particularLudwig Leichhardt himself, his British botanist Daniel Bunce, and the intriguing figure of Mr Turner, an Indigenous AustralianI trace the ways in which mimicry-as-depropriation is dealt with across the colonial archive.

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Metadaten
Author details:Lars EcksteinORCiDGND
DOI:https://doi.org/10.1080/14443058.2015.1076024
ISSN:1444-3058
ISSN:1835-6419
Title of parent work (English):Journal of Australian studies
Publisher:Routledge, Taylor & Francis Group
Place of publishing:Abingdon
Publication type:Article
Language:English
Year of first publication:2015
Publication year:2015
Release date:2017/03/27
Tag:Ludwig Leichhardt; depropriation; mimicry
Volume:39
Issue:4
Number of pages:17
First page:512
Last Page:528
Organizational units:Philosophische Fakultät / Institut für Anglistik und Amerikanistik
Peer review:Referiert
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