This article draws on both published and unpublished private family writing to examine how European settler colonial families in southeastern Australia and New Zealand negotiated worlds of sickness and health between 1850 and 1910. It argues that personal writing is a neglected yet rich repository for shedding light on colonial cultures of health across families and households in colonial Australia and New Zealand. In examining challenges to well-being and gendered lay health care practices inside domestic spaces, we glimpse more than worlds of health and treatment. Through their management of health and illness in private domestic spaces, the sense of well-being colonial families created for their members tells us something both about thei...
International historians have begun to challenge the view that the nineteenth-century psychiatric ho...
In the nineteenth century, place bore immediately and urgently on questions of imperialism, race, an...
This thesis explores the relationship between migration and disease in c.1830 – c.1860. Each chapter...
This article draws on both published and unpublished private family writing to examine how European ...
This thesis examines health care in colonial New Zealand and sets about identifying and recognising ...
This article explores the use of memory and material culture in the history of families who travelle...
The Māori of Aotearoa New Zealand are a case-study of the negative impacts of colonization on the he...
A Fruitful new area of environmental history research can be undertaken on the relationship between ...
The Koori Health Research Database (KHRD) began in 2000, as a partnership between the Bunjilaka Abor...
Historians have focused on early twentieth-century positive eugenics in New Zealand. In this article...
This thesis examines anxieties about national fitness and efficiency in nineteenth-century New Zeala...
In the wake of the Indian Uprising in 1857, British sanitary campaigner and statistician Florence Ni...
As in the neighbouring colony of Victoria, homeopathy in colonial New South Wales attracted the supp...
During the nineteenth century, New Zealand was promoted as a land of plenty, promising a ‘better lif...
This article examines how female immigrants were characterised inside the Yarra Bend Asylum in Melbo...
International historians have begun to challenge the view that the nineteenth-century psychiatric ho...
In the nineteenth century, place bore immediately and urgently on questions of imperialism, race, an...
This thesis explores the relationship between migration and disease in c.1830 – c.1860. Each chapter...
This article draws on both published and unpublished private family writing to examine how European ...
This thesis examines health care in colonial New Zealand and sets about identifying and recognising ...
This article explores the use of memory and material culture in the history of families who travelle...
The Māori of Aotearoa New Zealand are a case-study of the negative impacts of colonization on the he...
A Fruitful new area of environmental history research can be undertaken on the relationship between ...
The Koori Health Research Database (KHRD) began in 2000, as a partnership between the Bunjilaka Abor...
Historians have focused on early twentieth-century positive eugenics in New Zealand. In this article...
This thesis examines anxieties about national fitness and efficiency in nineteenth-century New Zeala...
In the wake of the Indian Uprising in 1857, British sanitary campaigner and statistician Florence Ni...
As in the neighbouring colony of Victoria, homeopathy in colonial New South Wales attracted the supp...
During the nineteenth century, New Zealand was promoted as a land of plenty, promising a ‘better lif...
This article examines how female immigrants were characterised inside the Yarra Bend Asylum in Melbo...
International historians have begun to challenge the view that the nineteenth-century psychiatric ho...
In the nineteenth century, place bore immediately and urgently on questions of imperialism, race, an...
This thesis explores the relationship between migration and disease in c.1830 – c.1860. Each chapter...