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Domesticating colonizers: domesticity, Indigenous domestic labor, and the modern Settler Colonial Nation

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posted on 2025-05-11, 15:47 authored by Victoria HaskinsVictoria Haskins
The placement of Indigenous girls and young women in white homes to work as servants was a key strategy of official policy and practice in both the United States and Australia. Between the 1880s and the Second World War, under the outing programs in the U.S. and various apprenticeship and indenturing schemes in Australia, the state regulated and constructed relations between Indigenous and white women in the home. Such state intervention not only helped to define domesticity in a modern world, but was integral to the formation of the modern settler colonial nation in its claims to civilizing authority in the United States and Australia. In the context of settler colonialism, domesticity was not hegemonic in this period, but rather was precarious and uncertain. By prescribing and demanding from employers demonstrations of domesticity, the state was engaged in perfecting white women as well as Indigenous women, the latter as the colonized, to be domesticated, and the former as the colonizer, to domesticate.

History

Journal title

American Historical Review

Volume

124

Issue

4

Pagination

1290-1301

Publisher

Oxford University Press

Language

  • en, English

College/Research Centre

Faculty of Education and Arts

School

School of Humanities and Social Science

Rights statement

This is a pre-copyedited, author-produced version of an article accepted for publication in American Historical Review following peer review. The version of record Haskins, Victoria. "Domesticating colonizers: domesticity, Indigenous domestic labor, and the modern Settler Colonial Nation”. Published in American Historical Review Vol. 124, Issue 4, p. 1290-1301 (2019), is available online at: http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/ahr/rhz647.