Colonial archives are notoriously selective in content and heavily mediated at that. These difficulties are compounded when it comes to Indigenous women. Their presence is comparatively slim even compared to Indigenous men, and representations of Indigenous women were frequently speculative, circulating in reiterative colonial networks of image and print and signalling more about colonial preoccupations than Indigenous lives. Despite these difficulties, there is a new and concerted push to recover the voices and experiences of Aboriginal women in Australia’s early colonial history. This chapter charts some of these new directions, tracing the historiography, and considering some of the methodological challenges, requirements, and innovation...
While it is certainly the case that Indigenous Australians have suffered the consequences of being t...
© 2017 Informa UK Limited, trading as Taylor & Francis Group. Feminist and queer engagements with ar...
In this volume, Mitchell Rolls reconsiders the question of silence in Aboriginal history by examinin...
Debate has occurred over the past decade about Aboriginal Australians’ ‘welfare dependency’. How can...
The colonial archive is replete with accounts of the intimacies of life at the frontier in early Ne...
Colonial exploration continues, all too often, to be rendered as heroic narratives of solitary, intr...
The study is concerned with the history of black and white women in Australia during the colonial pe...
Colonialist views of Indigenous bodies and sexualities continue to affect Indigenous peoples worldwi...
The aim of this on-going research is to interrogate the era of colonialism in Australia (1896-1966) ...
Until recently it was widely believed that Aboriginal people had disappeared from the coastal part o...
This essay describes a research project under way that will provide a social history of the law base...
The relationship between Boorong, a young Aboriginal girl, and Mary Johnson, the wife of the first c...
When I embarked on my postgraduate studies, with an enthusiasm for finding out more about the histor...
The aim of this on-going research is to interrogate the era of colonialism in Australia (1896-1966) ...
The aim of this on-going research is to interrogate the era of colonialism in Australia (1896-1966) ...
While it is certainly the case that Indigenous Australians have suffered the consequences of being t...
© 2017 Informa UK Limited, trading as Taylor & Francis Group. Feminist and queer engagements with ar...
In this volume, Mitchell Rolls reconsiders the question of silence in Aboriginal history by examinin...
Debate has occurred over the past decade about Aboriginal Australians’ ‘welfare dependency’. How can...
The colonial archive is replete with accounts of the intimacies of life at the frontier in early Ne...
Colonial exploration continues, all too often, to be rendered as heroic narratives of solitary, intr...
The study is concerned with the history of black and white women in Australia during the colonial pe...
Colonialist views of Indigenous bodies and sexualities continue to affect Indigenous peoples worldwi...
The aim of this on-going research is to interrogate the era of colonialism in Australia (1896-1966) ...
Until recently it was widely believed that Aboriginal people had disappeared from the coastal part o...
This essay describes a research project under way that will provide a social history of the law base...
The relationship between Boorong, a young Aboriginal girl, and Mary Johnson, the wife of the first c...
When I embarked on my postgraduate studies, with an enthusiasm for finding out more about the histor...
The aim of this on-going research is to interrogate the era of colonialism in Australia (1896-1966) ...
The aim of this on-going research is to interrogate the era of colonialism in Australia (1896-1966) ...
While it is certainly the case that Indigenous Australians have suffered the consequences of being t...
© 2017 Informa UK Limited, trading as Taylor & Francis Group. Feminist and queer engagements with ar...
In this volume, Mitchell Rolls reconsiders the question of silence in Aboriginal history by examinin...