Publication | Closed Access
Constructing the Port: External Perceptions and Interventions in the Making of Place in Port Adelaide, South Australia
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Citations
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References
2006
Year
Historical GeographyColonialismDecolonialityEducationSocial SciencesPort AdelaideAbstract Port AdelaideSettler ColonialismSouth AustraliaUrban HistoryCultural GeographyCommunity EngagementSocial ImpactCulturePolitical GeographyExternal PerceptionsAnthropologyCross-cultural PlacemakingSpatial Politics
Abstract Port Adelaide, South Australia has been stigmatised as ‘Port Misery’ for over one hundred and fifty years. The origins of this stigmatised discourse can be traced prior to actual colonisation, having their genesis in wide political debates. This reflects the complex and contested nature of landscape, revealing that ‘Port Misery’ constitutes a powerful meta‐narrative that has been projected onto Port Adelaide by powerful and often external actors. This stigmatising discourse may lie dormant for prolonged periods of time, only to be remobilised to serve specific political, social and economic objectives. Recently, the ‘Port Misery’ discourse has been remobilised to justify the redevelopment of Port Adelaide from an industrial to a post‐industrial landscape.
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