Australian Journal of Biography and History: No. 6, 2022
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Description
This special issue of Australian Journal of Biography and History, ‘Writing Slavery into Biography: Australian Legacies of British Slavery’, uses biographical approaches to explore how British slavery shaped the Australian colonies. It is the first stand-alone journal issue to feature an emerging body of historical work tracing the movement of people, investment and ideas from the Caribbean to Australia. Seven refereed articles and a roundtable discussion show how investment, imperial aspiration and migration turned towards Britain's ‘Second Empire’ in the aftermath of the Slavery Abolition Act 1833.
A substantive introduction reviews this emerging field of research and outlines preliminary findings. In her article, Jane Lydon examines the movement of two interconnected families (the Ridleys and Walcotts) from Demerara to Britain to the Swan River, where they acquired large land grants, participated in exploration and resource exploitation, and led the search for labour sources. Georgina Arnott investigates Western Australia’s first governor James Stirling’s biographical links to American and Caribbean slavery in light of ideas about race and labour that he promoted in Western Australia. And together Zoë Laidlaw and Georgina Arnott show how dictionaries of biography can be used alongside the Legacies of British Slavery database (hosted by University College London) to identify Australasian settlers with connections to slavery. They note the ways in which collective approaches to biography can reveal otherwise invisible patterns in global transfers of wealth, people and ideas.
With an eye to regionally specific processes of subjugation and enslavement in the northern Western Australian pearling and pastoralist industries, Malcolm Allbrook considers biography’s potential to illustrate the shadowy world of ‘blackbirding’ in relation to the perpetrators, the officials and the Aboriginal enslaved. Emma Christopher brings to life the colonial legacies of slavery in her account of Albert Messiah, Ishmael Williamson and John Henderson, sailors of African origin who worked on Pacific labour ships during the late nineteenth century, and whose lives illuminate the complex racial hierarchies of the Queensland frontier. Beth Robertson tells the layered story of her own great-great-grandfather, Edward Stirling, the illegitimate son of a British slave-owner and a woman of Ghanaian descent, whose material benefit from slavery helped him become a successful pastoralist and miner in South Australia, despite remaining the subject of racial prejudice.
Paul Arthur and Isabel Smith note the ‘biographical turn’ in museum exhibitions featuring stories of enslavement over the last two decades. They argue that this has enabled exhibitors to show stories of resistance, contingency and agency, albeit while navigating the ethical complexities of telling other people’s traumatic life stories. The feature section of this issue concludes with a roundtable discussion between Catherine Hall, Keith McClelland, Zoë Laidlaw, Jeremy Martens and Georgina Arnott on the topic of linking the legacies of British slave ownership to Australian colonisation. Here, Hall observes that biography, when used in combination with prosopography, reveals how the lives and family trajectories of slave owners were distinguished amongst imperial capitalists at large. This issue builds understanding of the precise ways that slavery shaped the Australian colonies.
Details
- ISSN (print):
- 2209-9522
- ISSN (online):
- 2209-9573
- Publication date:
- May 2022
- Imprint:
- ANU Press
- DOI:
- http://doi.org/10.22459/AJBH.06.2022
- Journal:
- Australian Journal of Biography and History
- Disciplines:
- Arts & Humanities: Biography & Autobiography, History
- Countries:
- Australia
PDF Chapters
Australian Journal of Biography and History: No. 6, 2022 »
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Special Issue: Writing Slavery into Biography: Australian Legacies of British Slavery
- Introduction (PDF, 0.8MB) – Georgina Arnott, Zoë Laidlaw and Jane Lydon doi
Research Articles
- From Demerara to Swan River: Charles Dawson Ridley and James Walcott in Western Australia (PDF, 1.8MB) – Jane Lydon doi
- Slavery, trade and settler colonialism: The Stirling family and Britain’s empire, c. 1730–1840 (PDF, 0.3MB) – Georgina Arnott doi
- ‘A disguised and unquestionable form of slavery’: Aboriginal labour on the nineteenth-century pearling fleet in north-west Australia (PDF, 1.6MB) – Malcolm Allbrook doi
- Edward Stirling: Embodiment and beneficiary of slave-ownership (PDF, 2.4MB) – Beth M. Robertson doi
- ‘Not a Kanaka or a N____’: Reading Pacific labour trading through the slave pasts of sailors of African origin (PDF, 0.2MB) – Emma Christopher doi
- National biographies and transnational lives: Tracing connections between slavery and settler colonialism (PDF, 0.3MB) – Zoë Laidlaw and Georgina Arnott doi
- Exhibiting slavery: Biographical approaches (PDF, 0.2MB) – Paul Longley Arthur and Isabel Smith doi
- Roundtable: Linking the legacies of British slave-ownership to Australian colonisation (PDF, 0.1MB) – Zoë Laidlaw, Catherine Hall, Keith McClelland, Jeremy Martens and Georgina Arnott doi
Book Reviews
- Karen Fox review of Mary Hoban, An Unconventional Wife: The Life of Julia Sorell Arnold (PDF, 0.1MB)
- Nichola Garvey review of Kate Grenville, A Room Made of Leaves and of Michelle Scott Tucker, Elizabeth Macarthur: A Life at the Edge of the World (PDF, 0.1MB)
- Carolyn Holbrook review of Liam Byrne, Becoming John Curtin and James Scullin: The Making of the Modern Labor Party, 1876–1921 (PDF, 0.1MB)
- David McKnight review of Sandra Hogan, With My Little Eye: The Incredible True Story of a Family of Spies in the Suburbs and of John Fahey, Traitors and Spies: Espionage and Corruption in High Places in Australia, 1901–50 (PDF, 0.1MB)
- Doug Munro review of Richard Allsop, Geoffrey Blainey: Writer, Historian, Controversialist (PDF, 0.1MB)
- David Musgrave review of Jonathan Persse, David Campbell: A Life of the Poet (PDF, 0.1MB)
- Geoff Page review of Toby Davidson, Good for the Soul: John Curtin’s Life with Poetry (PDF, 0.1MB)
- Andrew Parkin review of Angela Woollacott, Don Dunstan: The Visionary Politician Who Changed Australia (PDF, 0.1MB)
- Wayne Reynolds review of James Cotton, ed., Documents on Australian Foreign Policy: Australia and the World 1920–1930 (PDF, 0.1MB)
- Geoff Robinson review of Terry Irving, The Fatal Lure of Politics: The Life and Thought of Vere Gordon Childe (PDF, 0.1MB)
- Sophie Scott-Brown review of Francis Larson, Undreamed Shores: The Hidden Heroines of British Anthropology (PDF, 0.1MB)
- Michelle Staff review of Jacqueline Kent, Vida: A Woman for our Time (PDF, 0.1MB)
- Garry Sturgess review of Michael Gawenda, The Powerbroker: Mark Leibler, an Australian Jewish Life and of Suzanne Rutland, Lone Voice: The Wars of Isi Leibler (PDF, 0.1MB)
- Elizabeth Webby review of Adrian Mitchell, Where Shadows Have Fallen: The Descent of Henry Kendall (PDF, 0.1MB)
- Stephen Wilks review of Sean Scalmer, Democratic Adventurer: Graham Berry and the Making of Australian Politics (PDF, 0.1MB)
- Contributors (PDF, 0.1MB)
- Copyright and journal information (PDF, 0.1MB)
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