Visualization of Colonial Assimilationist Policies: Who?

In the first instance of the visual analysis, the Who factor refers to both the subject of the photograph, as well as the colonial documentary photographer. In this respect, there are a number of important questions that must be addressed to discern the image's underlying meaning, such as:

  • Who is the photographed individual?
  • Why are they in particular photographed?
  • Who is the photographer?
  • What was their motivation or purpose for capturing the image(s)?
  • Who was the photographer acting on behalf of?
  • What does the photographer's presence indicate about the policies and attitudes of the particular colonial state?

In spite of the fact that Australia did not adopt an official policy of assimilation until the Initial Conference of Commonwealth and State Aboriginal Authorities in 1937, there was a clear model for the implementation of such a practice. Since the turn of the century, there existed a precedent within the Northern Territory for the removal of 'Half-Caste' children and their ensuing placement within Aboriginal Institutions to facilitate eventual absorption into the white settler society. This practice is inherently visible when studying contemporary photographs taken in the 1910s and 1920s, which seem to reflect the apparent shift from the nineteenth-century policy of 'protective' segregation to full throttle assimilation in the first decades of the twentieth century, with the hope that absorbing the 'Half-Caste' children into society would neutralize the greatest threat to the colonial dream of a 'White Australia'. 

It is possible to see this reality at work for one's self, by looking to contemporary photographs that act as "visual dimensions of the past" according to Curtis. [1] In the Australian context, the select photographs within this exhibit are overwhelmingly of 'Half-Caste' children and young adults that are predominately photographed in large groups, and most often alongside or in the vicinity of a white settler-civilian or figure of authority. This is perhaps best exemplified in the photographs — images 3 to 6 — immediately following this paragraph. Each of these specified photographs depict 'Half-Caste' children and a white settler — either a child or adult — in the same frame. The close proximity creates a sense of acceptance, as if the 'rightful' place of these children of half-European stock was in white-run institutions where they could learn the customs and values that would aid in their eventual integration into settler society. It is indeed possible to read these photographs in such a manner since, as Curtis observes, historic images are capable of reflecting "the biases and racist assumptions of private and government aid agencies" within the contemporary period. [2] 

There is a saviour-like, paternalist sentiment in the photographs and especially the accompanying captions, one which explicitly refers to the "plight of the half caste" as a "sorry one and an urgent problem". [14]

In contrast, the depictions of individuals identified as Metis are more of a diverse assemblage with some portraits that varying between headshots and full-length documentary style images, and group photographs that, by and large, focus on the adults, as opposed to the children. On occasion, Metis children appear in the select images; although, it is typically alongside parents and/or relatives of some sort, as demonstrated in image 8 on the right. Therein, very rarely were Metis children the lone subject(s) in contemporary photographs from the early twentieth century; however, there are a few exceptions as seen on the exhibit's home page.

Footnotes

[1] James Curtis, “Making Sense of Documentary Photography,” History Matters: The U.S. Survey on the Web, n.d., 2. 

[2] James Curtis, “Making Sense of Documentary Photography,” History Matters: The U.S. Survey on the Web, n.d., 8. 
[3] Jack Laver, Barrow Load of “Walkerville Bitter,” 1925, Photograph, 20.9 x 12.6 cm, PRG 1365/1/318, State Library of South Australia: Laver Collection.

[4] Jack Laver, Boxing Lessons, 1923, Photograph, 20.5 x 15.9 cm, PRG 1365/1/316, State Library of South Australia: Laver Collection.

[5] Jack Laver, Sports Day, Alice Springs, 1924, Photograph, 20.2 x 15.4 cm, PRG 1365/1/258, State Library of South Australia: Laver Collection.

[6] Jack Laver, Sports Day, Alice Springs, 1924, Photograph, 20.2 x 15.4 cm, PRG 1365/1/258, State Library of South Australia: Laver Collection.

[7] Missionary Annie Lock with Enbarda (Betsy) Left, and Dolly Cumming, Both Children from the Alice Springs Area in Central Australia. Photo Taken in Darwin. Photo 93, 1928, Photograph, A1, 1929/984 Item #8189452, National Archives of Australia.

[8] David Carment, Christine Edward, Barbara James, Robyn Maynard, Alan Powell, and Helen J. Wilson, eds., Northern Territory Dictionary of Biography: Revised Edition (Charles Darwin University Press, 2008): 356.

[9] David Carment, Christine Edward, Barbara James, Robyn Maynard, Alan Powell, and Helen J. Wilson, eds., Northern Territory Dictionary of Biography: Revised Edition (Charles Darwin University Press, 2008): 356.

[10] David Carment, Christine Edward, Barbara James, Robyn Maynard, Alan Powell, and Helen J. Wilson, eds., Northern Territory Dictionary of Biography: Revised Edition (Charles Darwin University Press, 2008): 356.

[11] Missionary Annie Lock with Enbarda (Betsy) Left, and Dolly Cumming, Both Children from the Alice Springs Area in Central Australia. Photo Taken in Darwin. Photo 93, 1928, Photograph, A1, 1929/984 Item #8189452, National Archives of Australia.

[12] Margaret D. Jacobs, “Indian Boarding Schools in Comparative Perspective: The Removal of Indigenous Children in the United States and Australia, 1880-1940,” in Boarding School Blues: Revisting American Indian Educational Experiences (University of Nebraska Press, 2006).

[13] Margaret D. Jacobs, “Indian Boarding Schools in Comparative Perspective: The Removal of Indigenous Children in the United States and Australia, 1880-1940,” in Boarding School Blues: Revisting American Indian Educational Experiences (University of Nebraska Press, 2006).

[14] 43. Neither Black nor White - Unwanted and with Neither Birthright nor Heritage, 1928-1929, Photograph, A1, 1928/10743 Item #31708781, National Archives of Australia.

[15] Half-Breed Commission, At Onion Lake (02), 1900, Photograph, Item #S-B9770, Gabriel Dumont Institute of Native Studies and Applied Research: Virtual Museum of Métis History and Culture; Half-Breed Commission, At Onion Lake (04), 1900, Photograph, Item #S-B9772, Gabriel Dumont Institute of Native Studies and Applied Research: Virtual Museum of Métis History and Culture.
[16] Michel Hogue, Metis and the Medicine Line: Creating a Border and Dividing a People (The University of North Carolina Press, 2015): 189.

[17] Half-Breed Commission, At Grand Rapids (01), 1900, Photograph, Item #S-B9812, Gabriel Dumont Institute of Native Studies and Applied Research: Virtual Museum of Métis History and Culture; Half-Breed Commission, At Onion Lake (01), 1900, Photograph, Item #S-B9769, Gabriel Dumont Institute of Native Studies and Applied Research: Virtual Museum of Métis History and Culture; Half-Breed Commission, At Onion Lake (02), 1900, Photograph, Item #S-B9770, Gabriel Dumont Institute of Native Studies and Applied Research: Virtual Museum of Métis History and Culture; Half-Breed Commission, At Onion Lake (04), 1900, Photograph, Item #S-B9772, Gabriel Dumont Institute of Native Studies and Applied Research: Virtual Museum of Métis History and Culture; Half-Breed Commission, Baking Bannocks, 1900, Photograph, Item #S-B9782, Gabriel Dumont Institute of Native Studies and Applied Research: Virtual Museum of Métis History and Culture; Half-Breed Commission, Commissioner’s Crew, 1900, Photograph, Item #S-B9777, Gabriel Dumont Institute of Native Studies and Applied Research: Virtual Museum of Métis History and Culture; Half-Breed Commission, Edouard Cadotte and John Sayis, 1900, Photograph, Item #S-B9779, Gabriel Dumont Institute of Native Studies and Applied Research: Virtual Museum of Métis History and Culture; Half-Breed Commission, François Lemire, 1900, Photograph, Item #S-B9764, Gabriel Dumont Institute of Native Studies and Applied Research: Virtual Museum of Métis History and Culture; Half-Breed Commission, The Commissioners’ Crew, 1900, Photograph, Item #S-B9811, Gabriel Dumont Institute of Native Studies and Applied Research: Virtual Museum of Métis History and Culture.