During the eighteenth century, the South Pacific became available to European expansion, and specifically to British exploration, trade and penal settlement. Recent scholarship has shown that this expansion occurred without agreement as to its function and benefits. As Jonathan Lamb has argued, the establishment of Britain’s Pacific dominions was characterised less by deliberate policy than by confusion in the face of the unknown. For all its immediacy and emotion, however, the early Pacific colonialism of sensibility, as we might call it, barely lasted into the nineteenth century. In the wake of the establishment of the Botany Bay penal colony, and in the aftermath of 1789, the Pacific was increasingly figured as a place of settlement. Wak...
The Terra Australis Incognita both as a geographical space and a topic in travel literature in the E...
Recent decades have witnessed a number of challenges from a variety of perspectives to long-standing...
© 1987? Richard JohnsonGeoffrey Blainey's reference to India in The Tyranny of Distance initiated my...
The Pacific of the mid eighteenth century was far removed from what it would become by the first dec...
This dissertation examines how the Pacific—covering one third of the world yet relatively new to Eur...
The hopes and dreams of those who wished to see New Zealand as the political and commercial headquar...
European incursions into the Indian and Pacific Oceans, following the Portuguese voyages of the earl...
Although there exists some ambiguity over the precise constitution of Oceania, given the scattering ...
Considering movements of people between South Asia, Africa and Australia offers an opporrunity to re...
Long before Magellan entered the Pacific in 1521 Westerners entertained ideas of undiscovered oceans...
Readers studying the intellectual impact of the insular Pacific on Western thought since the Magella...
Only forty days after Governor Phillip's First Fleet entered Port Jackson on 26th January 1788 to f...
The belated European rediscovery of the Pacific helped to test, modify, extend, or otherwise realize...
Mobility was constitutive of the 19th century British colonial period in the Pacific. The circulatio...
The European discovery of the Chatham Islands in 1791 resulted in significant consequences for its i...
The Terra Australis Incognita both as a geographical space and a topic in travel literature in the E...
Recent decades have witnessed a number of challenges from a variety of perspectives to long-standing...
© 1987? Richard JohnsonGeoffrey Blainey's reference to India in The Tyranny of Distance initiated my...
The Pacific of the mid eighteenth century was far removed from what it would become by the first dec...
This dissertation examines how the Pacific—covering one third of the world yet relatively new to Eur...
The hopes and dreams of those who wished to see New Zealand as the political and commercial headquar...
European incursions into the Indian and Pacific Oceans, following the Portuguese voyages of the earl...
Although there exists some ambiguity over the precise constitution of Oceania, given the scattering ...
Considering movements of people between South Asia, Africa and Australia offers an opporrunity to re...
Long before Magellan entered the Pacific in 1521 Westerners entertained ideas of undiscovered oceans...
Readers studying the intellectual impact of the insular Pacific on Western thought since the Magella...
Only forty days after Governor Phillip's First Fleet entered Port Jackson on 26th January 1788 to f...
The belated European rediscovery of the Pacific helped to test, modify, extend, or otherwise realize...
Mobility was constitutive of the 19th century British colonial period in the Pacific. The circulatio...
The European discovery of the Chatham Islands in 1791 resulted in significant consequences for its i...
The Terra Australis Incognita both as a geographical space and a topic in travel literature in the E...
Recent decades have witnessed a number of challenges from a variety of perspectives to long-standing...
© 1987? Richard JohnsonGeoffrey Blainey's reference to India in The Tyranny of Distance initiated my...