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Australia’s ‘Chinaman’ place names spark racism debate, calls for change

  • Politicians are fond of touting Australia’s multiculturalism – but can it shed the vestiges of its racist past?

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Members of the Australian-Chinese community await the arrival of China’s Premier Li Qiang and Australian Prime Minister Anthony Albanese in Perth last month. Photo: AFP
Su-Lin Tanin Singapore
Australia has more place names that contain the racial slur “Chinaman” than any other country with significant Asian migration, new research reveals, with Australians from all walks of life saying it makes them uncomfortable and normalises discrimination.
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There are 253 place names containing the words “Chinaman” or “Chinamen” in Australia, think tank Per Capita found, far outnumbering other nations with a “similar history of anti-Chinese legislation and exclusion”.

Laurie Pearcey, an Australian executive at the Chinese University of Hong Kong, said names of places like Chinamans Beach in the affluent Sydney suburb of Mosman reinforced racist behaviours among children and adults.

“I remember playground taunting of Asian children with cries of ‘ching-chong Chinaman’ while other kids would stand there pulling their eyes to one side and making themselves bucktoothed,” he said.

“They were literally turning themselves into caricatures of Chinese people, which appeared far too often in pre-federation Australian newspapers.”

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One infamous cartoon from the period predating the federation of Australia in 1901 was The Mongolian Octopus published by Sydney-based magazine The Bulletin in 1886 alongside xenophobic articles about Chinese arrivals. It depicted a Chinese man’s head with narrow eyes and buck teeth attached to octopus tentacles grasping at representations of typhoid, cheap labour and immorality, among others.

Osmond Chiu, a research fellow at Per Capita, said the tally of racially charged names in Australia would have been even higher if road and track names had been included in the count.

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