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'Me write myself' : the free Aboriginal inhabitants of Van Diemen's Land at Wybalenna, 1832-47 / Leonie Stevens.

By: Publication details: Clayton, Victoria : Monash University Publishing, 2017.Description: xliv, 356 pages : maps ; 24 cmISBN:
  • 9781925495638
Other title:
  • Free Aboriginal inhabitants of Van Diemen's Land at Wybalenna, 1832-47
Subject(s): Genre/Form: DDC classification:
  • 305.89915 23
Summary: Exiles, lost souls, remnants of a dying race ... The fate of the First Nations peoples of Van Diemen?s Land is one of the most infamous chapters in Australian, and world, history. The men, women and children exiled to Flinders Island in the 1830s and 40s have often been written about, but never allowed to speak for themselves. This book changes that. Penned by the exiles during their fifteen years at the settlement called Wybalenna, items in the Flinders Island Chronicle, sermons, letters and petitions offer a compelling corrective to traditional portrayals of a hopeless, dispossessed, illiterate people?s final days. The exiles did not see themselves as prisoners, but as a Free People. Seen through their own writing, the community at Wybalenna was vibrant, complex and evolving. Rather than a depressed people simply waiting for death, their own words reveal a politically astute community engaged in a fifteen-year campaign for their own freedom: one which was ultimately successful. ?Me Write Myself? is a compelling story that will profoundly affect understandings of Tasmanian and Australian history.
Holdings
Item type Home library Collection Call number Status Date due Barcode Item reserves
Book Melbourne Athenaeum Library Non-Fiction 305.899 STE Available 066950
Total reserves: 0

Contains biographical information.

Includes bibliographical references (pages [332]-342) and index.

Exiles, lost souls, remnants of a dying race ... The fate of the First Nations peoples of Van Diemen?s Land is one of the most infamous chapters in Australian, and world, history. The men, women and children exiled to Flinders Island in the 1830s and 40s have often been written about, but never allowed to speak for themselves. This book changes that. Penned by the exiles during their fifteen years at the settlement called Wybalenna, items in the Flinders Island Chronicle, sermons, letters and petitions offer a compelling corrective to traditional portrayals of a hopeless, dispossessed, illiterate people?s final days. The exiles did not see themselves as prisoners, but as a Free People. Seen through their own writing, the community at Wybalenna was vibrant, complex and evolving. Rather than a depressed people simply waiting for death, their own words reveal a politically astute community engaged in a fifteen-year campaign for their own freedom: one which was ultimately successful. ?Me Write Myself? is a compelling story that will profoundly affect understandings of Tasmanian and Australian history.

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