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Dear Colleagues,</div>
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You may be interested in my article from the amazing new special special issue, 'Unsettling Tourism Geographies', edited by Bryan Grimwood, Emma Lee, and FreyaHiggins-Desbiolles. </div>
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<b><a href="https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/14616688.2024.2380321" id="LPlnk270779" title="https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/14616688.2024.2380321">Seeing like a settler: place-making, settler heritage, and tourism in Dubbo, Australia</a></b></div>
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This paper focuses on the settler colonial landscapes of tourism in the regional city of Dubbo, Australia. Dubbo is situated on Wiradyuri Country in the Orana region of New South Wales. Focusing specifically on the heritage-listed Old Dubbo Gaol and the Dundullimal
Homestead, a former pastoral station, I explicate how these tourist sites offer experiences that normalise settler dwelling and occupation of First Nations Country. The Old Dubbo Gaol and Dundullimal occupy a broader settler colonial landscape where Dubbo
is presented historically as ‘empty’ until settlers exploited the town’s ‘natural’ resources. By occluding the relationship between invasion, pastoralism, and Indigenous dispossession, the sites reproduce for visitors settler colonial metanarratives of dwelling.
Using Tim Ingold’s notion of taskscape, I show how the tourist sites create taskscapes which invite visitors and consumers to engage in settler forms of dwelling that normalise a settler colonial landscape. Tourist taskscapes consist of the activities and
interactions in a heritage site that encourage visitors to take an active role in experiencing place and history. By aligning these experiences and activities to settler narratives and histories, the sites interpellate visitors into the processes of autochthony
that were/are used to negate First Nations sovereignties. While these taskscapes are leaky and contain the presence of First Nations in select parts of the heritage sites, the taskscapes dominate heritage tourism and normalise settler colonisation as a feature
of place-making that does not require explicit explanation or education.</div>
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Kind regards,</div>
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Holly.</div>
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