This thesis contributes to an emerging sub-field in the humanities which considers ideas of home and belonging in the context of migration. Specifically, it investigates how nineteenth-century ‘respectable’ British women who settled in mid-nineteenth-century Australia and India thought about home, and explores how the meaning of this word could change over time. It examines these ideas using a rich trove of written and visual sources created by British settler and sojourner women as they journeyed to, and lived within the isolated colonies of India, Van Diemen’s Land and Western Australia, from the late 1820s to 1860. Each chapter examines a different meaning or dimension of home, illuminating the highly individualised ways in which home wa...
This thesis examines through the theoretical discourses of diaspora how the icon of home is articula...
In 1909 Alice Lucy Hodson’s memoir Letters from a Settlement was published. It is unique in providin...
The “element of romanticization” or the constant yearning for ones roots—sensory a...
This study focuses on the British wives of civil servants and army officers who lived in India from...
During the second half of the eighteenth century the British East India Company popularised the imag...
Home is a significant geographical and social concept. It is not only a three-dimensional structure,...
This book is about Victorian women’s representations of colonial life in India. These accounts contr...
This thesis examines the writing of Irish identity in Australia to explore how nineteenth-century\ud...
Due to the character of the original source materials and the nature of batch digitization, quality ...
This study explores how female authored travel texts and their reviews reveal the diversity of disco...
This study explores how female authored travel texts and their reviews reveal the diversity of disco...
In the late 1850s, a young woman, orphaned as a child in India under the Raj, ran away from unsympat...
Considering the central role of the hearth in Australian settler culture, this essay examines how mi...
In the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, the poor socio-economic and political conditions in...
Recording of presentation (audio plus slides). Home is not always, or not only, a place or a fixed l...
This thesis examines through the theoretical discourses of diaspora how the icon of home is articula...
In 1909 Alice Lucy Hodson’s memoir Letters from a Settlement was published. It is unique in providin...
The “element of romanticization” or the constant yearning for ones roots—sensory a...
This study focuses on the British wives of civil servants and army officers who lived in India from...
During the second half of the eighteenth century the British East India Company popularised the imag...
Home is a significant geographical and social concept. It is not only a three-dimensional structure,...
This book is about Victorian women’s representations of colonial life in India. These accounts contr...
This thesis examines the writing of Irish identity in Australia to explore how nineteenth-century\ud...
Due to the character of the original source materials and the nature of batch digitization, quality ...
This study explores how female authored travel texts and their reviews reveal the diversity of disco...
This study explores how female authored travel texts and their reviews reveal the diversity of disco...
In the late 1850s, a young woman, orphaned as a child in India under the Raj, ran away from unsympat...
Considering the central role of the hearth in Australian settler culture, this essay examines how mi...
In the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, the poor socio-economic and political conditions in...
Recording of presentation (audio plus slides). Home is not always, or not only, a place or a fixed l...
This thesis examines through the theoretical discourses of diaspora how the icon of home is articula...
In 1909 Alice Lucy Hodson’s memoir Letters from a Settlement was published. It is unique in providin...
The “element of romanticization” or the constant yearning for ones roots—sensory a...