For most Australian Aboriginal people, the impact of colonialism was blunt—dispossession, dislocation, disease, murder, and missionization. Yet there is another story of Australian history that has remained untold, a story of enterprise and entrepreneurship, of Aboriginal people seizing the opportunity to profit from life at sea as whalers and sealers. In some cases participation was voluntary; in others it was more invidious and involved kidnapping and trade in women. In many cases, the individuals maintained and exercised a degree of personal autonomy and agency within their new circumstances. This book explores some of their lives and adventures by analyzing archival records of maritime industry, captains’ logs, ships’ records, and the journals of the sailors themselves, among other artifacts. Much of what is known about this period comes from the writings of Herman Melville, and in this book Melville’s whaling novels act as a prism through which relations aboard ships are understood. Drawing on both history and literature,
Roving Mariners provides a comprehensive history of Australian Aboriginal whaling and sealing.
Tabela de Conteúdo
List of Illustrations
Acknowledgements
1. Whalers, Sealers and Mariners: Australian Aboriginal Men and Women in the Southern Oceans 1790–1870
2. “They are … very fond of the flesh of the whale”: Aborigines, Whales, Whaling, and Whalers
3. “A New Holland Half-Caste”: Tommy Chaseland: Diaspora, Autonomy, and Hybridity
4. “A good man can do anything he makes up his mind to do, no matter what”: Tasmanian Aboriginal Men and Whaling
5. “Most of them had native wives”: Cross-Cultural Relationships in Southern Australia’s Sealing Industry
6. “Those women were free people”: Domestic Spaces, Hybridity, and Survival
7. Remnants, Artifacts, and the Doing and Being of History: A Sort of Epilogue
Notes
Bibliography
Index
Sobre o autor
Lynette Russell is an Australian Research Council Professorial Fellow and Director of the Monash Indigenous Centre at Monash University. She has written several books, including
Appropriated Pasts: Indigenous Peoples and the Colonial Culture of Archaeology (with Ian J. Mc Niven) and
Savage Imaginings: Historical and Contemporary Constructions of Australian Aboriginalities.