Britain is a post-genocidal state, although it (not surprisingly) has no official means for the memorialization of its colonial genocides. Britain cannot however be simply considered amnesiac about its genocidal past, which it has informally memorialized across various cultural genres. This article explores this observation through a case study of the ways in which the genocide of Indigenous Tasmanians has been remembered and indeed memorialized. Accounts of the genocide of Indigenous Tasmanians have been a consistent feature of British museum, literary and academic culture since the 1830s. As such British engagement with genocide in Tasmania offers an interesting example of how genocide can be incorporated into national narratives which re...
The history of British government and settler treatment of the Tasmanian Aborigines in the first th...
This article addresses how (‘selective’) British memory has served to emphasize the extreme violence...
Reproduced with permission of Australian Scholarly PublishingIn late 1998 I toured several sites of ...
The aim of this paper is to elucidate how the process of the colonisation of Tasmania in the ninete...
The debate about whether genocide took place on the Australian colonial frontier began more than thi...
Little more than seventy years after the British settled Van Diemen s Land (later Tasmania) in 1803,...
Genocide scholars have not engaged with the killing of the Moriori people of New Zealand\u27s Chatha...
Tasmania was a distinctive location for nineteenth-century travellers, and a regular feature of the ...
The Black War in Tasmania 1823-1834, is widely accorded by historians as one of the best documented ...
The use of the term 'genocide' as a model for explaining frontier violence has generated varying deg...
The work presented in this submission deals with the impact of colonisation on the Australian Aborig...
In Australia, public remembrance, particularly relating to national identity and colonial violence, ...
This thesis attempts to come to grips with the narrative traditions, the tropological models and th...
The British colonisation of Tasmania began in 1803. By 1876, the British declared the Tasmanian Abor...
Tasmania’s unique combination of geography, deep human history and the particular context of British...
The history of British government and settler treatment of the Tasmanian Aborigines in the first th...
This article addresses how (‘selective’) British memory has served to emphasize the extreme violence...
Reproduced with permission of Australian Scholarly PublishingIn late 1998 I toured several sites of ...
The aim of this paper is to elucidate how the process of the colonisation of Tasmania in the ninete...
The debate about whether genocide took place on the Australian colonial frontier began more than thi...
Little more than seventy years after the British settled Van Diemen s Land (later Tasmania) in 1803,...
Genocide scholars have not engaged with the killing of the Moriori people of New Zealand\u27s Chatha...
Tasmania was a distinctive location for nineteenth-century travellers, and a regular feature of the ...
The Black War in Tasmania 1823-1834, is widely accorded by historians as one of the best documented ...
The use of the term 'genocide' as a model for explaining frontier violence has generated varying deg...
The work presented in this submission deals with the impact of colonisation on the Australian Aborig...
In Australia, public remembrance, particularly relating to national identity and colonial violence, ...
This thesis attempts to come to grips with the narrative traditions, the tropological models and th...
The British colonisation of Tasmania began in 1803. By 1876, the British declared the Tasmanian Abor...
Tasmania’s unique combination of geography, deep human history and the particular context of British...
The history of British government and settler treatment of the Tasmanian Aborigines in the first th...
This article addresses how (‘selective’) British memory has served to emphasize the extreme violence...
Reproduced with permission of Australian Scholarly PublishingIn late 1998 I toured several sites of ...