The fascinating and sometimes horrifying story of Aborigines in Victoria since white settlement, from one of Australia's leading historians.
Early settlers saw Victoria and its rolling grasslands as Australia felix happy south land a prize left for Englishmen by God. However, for its original inhabitants this country was home and life, not to be relinquished without a fierce struggle.
Richard Broome tells the story of the impact of European ideas, guns, killer microbes and a pastoral economy on the networks of kinship, trade and cultures that various Aboriginal peoples of Victoria had developed over millennia. From first settlement to the present, he shows how Aboriginal families have coped with ongoing disruption and displacement, and how individuals and groups have challenged the system. With painful stories of personal loss as well as many successes, Broome outlines how Aboriginal Victorians survived near decimation to become a vibrant community today.
The first history of black-white interaction in Victoria to the present, Aboriginal Victorians traces the story of Aboriginal people through consultation and interviews with Aboriginal communities and families and rich historical research, to produce a compelling and even-handed epic. It won the NSW Premier's History Awards Australian History Prize (2006) and the Victorian Community History Awards Best Print Publication Award (2007), and was short-listed for the Human Rights Awards Non-Fiction Award (2005).
'Richard Broome is to be congratulated for writing this history in a style that is easy to read, very informative and brings the past to the present.' - Jim Berg, JP, Gunditjmara man, founder and director of the Koorie Heritage Trust
'This finely crafted and wonderfully compassionate book deepens our understanding of the history of colonialism.' - Bain Attwood, Adjunct Professor, Centre for Cross-Cultural Research, Australian National University
Author bio:
RICHARD BROOME is a Professor of History and Associate at La Trobe University. One of Australia's most respected scholars of Aboriginal history, he has written many articles and books including Aboriginal Australians and Sideshow Alley.
Category:
History
ISBN:
9781741145694
Awards:
Winner Best Print/Publication, Victorian Community History Awards 2007 AU; Short-listed Victorian Premier's Literary Awards 2006 AU; Winner NSW Premier's History Awards, Australian History Prize 2006 AU
Table Of Contents:
Part One - Wild Times: 1800-1850
1. Meeting strangers
2. Melbourne: an Aboriginal domain
3. Countering civilisers
4. Accommodating sheep herders
5. Dangerous frontiers
Part Two - Transformations: 1850-1886
6. Negotiating two worlds
7. New communities
8. Country wanderers'
9. A miserable spadeful of ground'
Part Three - Assimilationism: 1886-1970
10. Under the Acts
11. Old Lake Tyers'
12. Fighting for Framlingham
13. Country campers
14. Melbourne and Aboriginal activism
15. Assimilation and its challengers
Part Four - Renaissance: 1970 onwards
16. Seeking autonomy
17. Being Aboriginal
Further reading
Index
Publisher:
Allen & Unwin
Imprint:
Allen & Unwin
Pub Date:
June 2005
Page Extent:
496
Format:
Paperback - C format
Age:
0 - 0
Subject:
Australasian & Pacific history