Tuesday 30 October 2012

Racism, Apparently

Racism, Apparently


The start of a new semester has arrived, the ruckus of the Union elections may have eased but once again Cromwell has managed to launch itself into the limelight of controversy.  
Cromwell College has a multitude of traditions; interesting, arcane, sometimes irrelevant, they all have a firm place in the Cromwell calendar.  One of the smaller and less socially consequential traditions is the annual international dinner.

The procedure for the evening goes as such. Each individual corridor nominates a nationality. They then dress themselves up as accurately as possible to replicate the appearance of this nationality. All well and good in theory right? Just a bit of fun, Mexicans in sombreros, Chinese in straw hats, the usual cultural debacle.  Apparently not this year. No, this year it all hit the proverbial fan. One ill-fated female corridor decided to dress as Indigenous Australians.

I personally didn’t see too much of an issue. Perhaps a bit distasteful but they weren’t attempting to play at any stereotypes or to paint indigenous Australians in a negative manner. While their attire wasn’t necessarily the most politically correct, I didn’t see the potential for any harm to be done and therefore I was not expecting the huge backlash that followed.

The entirety of the college was informed that, one week after the dinner, journalists for a variety of newspapers, including the Brisbane Times and the Sydney Morning Herald had taken a very negative interest in the portrayal of aboriginals by the college.

Naturally the photos of the night were first discovered by journalists on Facebook. Classic example of social media destroying reputations. Fortunately the issue has now been resolved, but only through extensive apologies and promises of cultural awareness programs that shall soon be installed into the college.
According the various sources of outraged discussion that have been circulating the web throughout the aftermath of the incident, the main issue taken was the use of “ Blackface”. I have come to realise the cultural significance and the various negative connotations associated with the use of such costuming, I cannot however understand how previously allocated associations with a costuming method can supersede the context of an event in deciding the cultural relevance of behaviour.  There was no malice, racism or even humour associated with the dress of the corridor at the dinner. They were simply attempting to replicate the appearance of Indigenous Australians.  That was the purpose of using blackface makeup at the event, not any other preconceived representations. While there are no full aboriginals in attendance to the college, there are many students of varying degrees of Aboriginal heritage.  While their opinions of course do not represent the greater Aboriginal community, it should be noted that none of them took offense to the attire of the girls due to the fact that they understood the context of the international dinner; a tribute to the variety of cultures we embrace at Cromwell College. This fact is what I think was lost upon the general public and as such the appropriateness of the dinner was brought into question.

This incident has been resolved, the way it was handled I am not criticising in the slightest. Despite the backlash and negative media representations I still firmly believe that context is an important part of cultural awareness. The fact that we at Cromwell have offended so many harks back to the issues of a hyper connected society. We are so integrated through the use of social media, the internet and other forms of connectivity that the privacy which allowed such traditions as international dinner to exist seems to be null and void.


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