Land Settlement in Early Tasmania
Creating an Antipodean England
Format:Paperback
Publisher:Cambridge University Press
Published:11th Dec '03
Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back
Van Diemen's Land as a case study in nineteenth-century European expansion and imperialism.
This is the first detailed examination of land alienation and land use by white settlers in an Australian colony. It treats the first decades of settlement in Van Diemen's Land, encompassing the effects of the European invasion on Aboriginal society, the early history of environmental degradation, the island's society history and the growth of primary industry. The book presents vivid insights into nineteenth-century society, where wool was so useless that it was burnt, and farmers lived in fear of bushrangers and Aborigines. We see how individuals were constrained by the rigid expectations of race, class and gender in a society where no white man ever stood trial for rape or murder of a black. Drawing on contemporary diaries and letters, as well as government statistics, manuals for intending settlers and newspaper reports, Sharon Morgan has built up a comprehensive picture of the significance of landscape and land use in early colonial society.
"The scarcity of political sociology gives this volume of social history, despite its fashionable division of themes, a more traditional feel. Nevertheless, with its basis in considerable archival research,, this is an interesting and worthwhile study." Rural Sociology
"Morgan merits congratulations for bringing her subject within the range of current historiographical concerns." The International History Review
ISBN: 9780521522960
Dimensions: 246mm x 189mm x 13mm
Weight: 430g
236 pages