‘The West Welcomes Refugees’: Community art as a location of culture | Intellect Skip to content
1981
Volume 5, Issue 2-3
  • ISSN: 1757-1936
  • E-ISSN: 1757-1944

Abstract

Abstract

‘The West Welcomes Refugees’ is a government initiated public art project featuring the stories of eleven different migrants and refugees who have settled in Footscray, an old industrial neighbourhood in Melbourne’s inner West. For the cultural researcher, this project invokes multiple terms of reference for situating and interpreting the work. As ‘community art’ it can be framed variously as art instrumentalized for governmental agendas, an organic expression of ‘community’, a social critique of the nation and a poetic reflection on place. This article engages with the unwieldy and contradictory nature of this project by conceiving of it as a complex location of culture, a term borrowed from Homi Bhabha. Bhabha brings a performative understanding to the relationship between community, culture and place. This framing opens up the social and postcolonial politics of ‘The West Welcomes Refugees’ in ways not possible within the theoretical terms currently dominating community arts discourses.

Loading

Article metrics loading...

/content/journals/10.1386/jaac.5.2-3.119_1
2013-12-01
2024-04-19
Loading full text...

Full text loading...

http://instance.metastore.ingenta.com/content/journals/10.1386/jaac.5.2-3.119_1
Loading
This is a required field
Please enter a valid email address
Approval was a success
Invalid data
An error occurred
Approval was partially successful, following selected items could not be processed due to error