|
Books > History > Australasian & Pacific history
Drawing on digital criminal records, this book traces the life
courses of young convicts who were sentenced at the Old Bailey and
transported to Van Diemen's Land in the early 19th century. It
explores the everyday lives of the convicts pre- and
post-transportation, focusing on their crimes, punishments,
education, employment and family life right up to their deaths.
Emma D. Watkins contextualizes these young convicts within the
punishment system, economy and culture that they were thrust into
by their forced movement to Australia. This allows an understanding
of the factors which determined their chances of achieving a
'settled life' away from crime in the colony. Packed with case
studies offering vivid accounts of the offenders' lives, Life
Courses of Young Convicts Transported to Van Diemen's Land makes an
important contribution to the history of transportation, social
history and Australian history.
As a journalist, Stewart Cockburn was instinctive and fearless. The
16-year-old copy boy who started at the Adelaide Advertiser in 1938
was to have a career in writing, radio and television that spanned
more than 45 years. Restless ambition took him to post-war London
with Reuters, to Melbourne with the Herald, to Canberra as Press
Secretary to Prime Minister Robert Menzies, and to Washington, DC
as Press Attache at the Australian Embassy. On returning to the
Advertiser, Cockburn's feature-writing won him a Walkley Award and
his opinion columns were ever informative and influential. In 1978
he challenged Premier Don Dunstan's politically charged sacking of
Police Commissioner Harold Salisbury. His tenacious journalism also
prompted the 1983 Royal Commission into the scientifically
questionable murder conviction of Eddie Splatt. His books included
The Salisbury Affair and very fine biographies of South Australia's
long-serving Premier Sir Thomas Playford and, with David Ellyard,
the eminent nuclear scientist Sir Mark Oliphant. In this biography,
Stewart Cockburn's daughter Jennifer draws on his many letters and
journals, bringing to life the father she knew and the changing
times he so closely observed.
'Macklin recounts, with beautiful detail, the following years of
Narcisse's life and his transformation . . . a great read for
anyone interested in Australia and its overlooked history' Ronan
Breathnach, Irish Examiner 'A truly remarkable account drawing upon
a version Pelletier gave when he eventually returned to his native
France and also on anthropological studies of the Daintree people.'
Piers Akerman, Daily Telegraph, Sydney 'An unforgettable tale of
transformation and upheaval.' Stuart McLean, Daily Telegraph,
Sydney A young boy abandoned in an alien landscape thousands of
miles from home is adopted by local people and becomes one of them,
welcomed into their community, marrying a wife and raising a child.
After seventeen years, he is stolen back to his 'real' life, where
he has another family, but dreams constantly of what he has left
behind. This is the remarkable true story of a French cabin boy
Narcisse Pelletier who, after disembarking from his ship the
Saint-Paul with the rest of its crew in search of drinking water,
found himself separated from his shipmates and in the end abandoned
on the north coast of Queensland, Australia. Narcisse was adopted
by an Aboriginal group who welcomed him as one of their own for
seventeen years, during which time he had a family of his own. In
1875, though, he was kidnapped by the brig John Bell and was
returned eventually to his family in Saint-Gilles, France, where he
became a lighthouse keeper. Robert Macklin makes skilful use of
Narcisse's own memoir Chez les sauvages along with new research to
tell this extraordinary story. Robert is a Queenslander so knows
the terrain and the people of the area in which Narcisse was left
behind. Through Noel Pearson's Cape York Institute, he has arranged
to meet descendants of the people who took the French cabin boy in
and who know the stories of his time in Australia. Robert has also
had access to a great deal of material on the early history of the
Cape through the Australian National Library. He has drawn on the
significant resources of the Australian Institute of Aboriginal and
Torres Strait Islander Studies (AIATSIS) in Canberra on Aboriginal
culture and history in Queensland and the Cape. In addition, he has
made use of Narcisse Pelletier's own writings, including his
account of his time in Australia, as well as several
contemporaneous accounts of the Kennedy expedition to the area,
including one from a member of the party. The author has made
several trips to Cape York and one to Saint-Gilles and
Saint-Nazaire in France.
|
You may like...
Untamed
Glennon Doyle
Paperback
(3)
R460
R419
Discovery Miles 4 190
|