This thesis examines thirteen published gold-rush narratives penned by authors who visited the goldfields of Victoria, Australia, and Otago, New Zealand, in the period 1851 to 1871. Through analysis of narrative representations and constructions, differences and similarities in the sources’ presentation of selected phenomena are observed and explained. This thesis seeks to deconstruct meanings of trans-Tasman gold fever and how narrative authors perceived selected themes. The chosen themes are divided by chapter. Chapter One considers narrative portrayals of success and failure on the goldfields. Chapter Two allows the narratives to define order and disorder, and places emphasis on concepts of behaviour and control. Chapter Three discuss...
The history of Māori miners at the Aorere gold rush in 1856–1858 is well documented in research by H...
Although little material evidence survives other than mullock heaps and the occasional ruined buildi...
It Happened to Me in Barkerville' argues that aboriginal people were participants in many aspects of...
This thesis examines the formation and transformation of Otago gold rush cultures in the nineteenth ...
Thousands of Chinese and European miners occupied the goldfields of Central Otago during the late ni...
This thesis is a study of the interaction between Māori and Pākehā in the Hauraki region during the ...
The story of Thames has been told and retold by many authors since the area was proclaimed a goldfie...
This thesis investigates nineteenth-century Australia as a frequently disregarded site of colonial d...
150 years ago, the carefully-planned Presbyterian settlement of Dunedin was torn apart by the discov...
Using Anderson’s Mill in the Victorian goldfield township of Smeaton as a case study, this thesis ex...
Abstract 150 years ago, the carefully-planned Presbyterian settlement of Dunedin was torn apart by t...
Fred Cahir tells the story about the magnitude of Aboriginal involvement on the Victorian goldfields...
Reconstructs the history of Aboriginal people and gold mining in Victoria from 1850-1870.Doctor of P...
In the 1960s Australian historians were criticized for being the ``high priests'' of a cult of forge...
© 2007 Dr. Sara MartinThis thesis examines family and community experience on the central Victorian ...
The history of Māori miners at the Aorere gold rush in 1856–1858 is well documented in research by H...
Although little material evidence survives other than mullock heaps and the occasional ruined buildi...
It Happened to Me in Barkerville' argues that aboriginal people were participants in many aspects of...
This thesis examines the formation and transformation of Otago gold rush cultures in the nineteenth ...
Thousands of Chinese and European miners occupied the goldfields of Central Otago during the late ni...
This thesis is a study of the interaction between Māori and Pākehā in the Hauraki region during the ...
The story of Thames has been told and retold by many authors since the area was proclaimed a goldfie...
This thesis investigates nineteenth-century Australia as a frequently disregarded site of colonial d...
150 years ago, the carefully-planned Presbyterian settlement of Dunedin was torn apart by the discov...
Using Anderson’s Mill in the Victorian goldfield township of Smeaton as a case study, this thesis ex...
Abstract 150 years ago, the carefully-planned Presbyterian settlement of Dunedin was torn apart by t...
Fred Cahir tells the story about the magnitude of Aboriginal involvement on the Victorian goldfields...
Reconstructs the history of Aboriginal people and gold mining in Victoria from 1850-1870.Doctor of P...
In the 1960s Australian historians were criticized for being the ``high priests'' of a cult of forge...
© 2007 Dr. Sara MartinThis thesis examines family and community experience on the central Victorian ...
The history of Māori miners at the Aorere gold rush in 1856–1858 is well documented in research by H...
Although little material evidence survives other than mullock heaps and the occasional ruined buildi...
It Happened to Me in Barkerville' argues that aboriginal people were participants in many aspects of...