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From the viewpoint of their native element' : Diving in the colonial undersea

Quigley, Killian
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Abstract
In 1952, The Australian Journal published two reports from the author Jean Devanny’s visit to Green Island (Wunyami) on the Great Barrier Reef. Diving underwater precipitated for Devanny an aesthetic and existential epiphany, as well as a minor but meaningful feminist achievement: ‘very few women,’ she wrote, had ‘actually descended in’ a diving bell previously. But most compelling – because most discomfiting – about Devanny’s articles is a moment when their watery reveries are interrupted by persons whose presences the scenario cannot seem to assimilate. Surveying her fascinating surroundings from the seabed, Devanny receives some unexpected ‘visitors’, men ‘brown’ and ‘strange’ whose arrival – and whose observations of the author herself – are framed as disturbances of the solo diver’s marinal communion. In this chapter, I approach these disruptions along three strands: the submarine erasure of Indo-Pacific labours, lives, and cultures; a solitary aesthetics of dreamlike submergence; and the strangely depoliticised construal, by The Australian Journal and others, of Devanny’s own authorship. I ask, ultimately, what these reefy reports might tell us about who and what is taken to belong beneath the waves – and how these things might matter for all our attempts to make knowledge in, of, and with the sea.
Keywords
Date
2025
Type
Book chapter
Journal
Book
Critical approaches to the Australian blue humanities
Volume
Issue
Page Range
82-92
Article Number
ACU Department
Institute for Humanities and Social Sciences
Faculty of Education and Arts
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Open Access Status
License
All rights reserved
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Controlled
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