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Anecdotes of personalities in 1890s.
Anecdotes related to him by author's father of personalities and places in eastern goldfields.
This book examines the perceptions of European travelling writers about southern Western Australia between 1850 and 1914. Theirs was a narrow vision of space and people in the region, shaped by their individual personalities, their position in society, and the prevailing discourses and ideologies of the age. Christian, Enlightenment, and Romantic philosophies had a major influence on their responses to the land – its cultivation and conservation, and its aesthetic qualities – and on their views of both indigenous and settler colonial society – their class and assumptions of race and ethnicity. The travelling men and women perpetuated an idealised view of a colonised landscape, and a “pioneer” community that eliminated class struggle and inequality, even though an analysis of their observations suggests otherwise. Nevertheless, although limited, their narratives are invaluable as a reflection of opinions, attitudes and knowledge prevalent during an age of imperialism. Their perspectives reveal unique viewpoints that differ from those of immigrants who wrote about their hopes and fears in making a new life for themselves. These travellers were economically secure, literate and educated; foundations which provide an insight into the way power and privilege, implicit in their writings, governed the way they imagined Western Australia in the colonial and immediate post-federation period. The tinted lenses through which European travelling writers narrowly observed space and people, presented a mythical, imagined sense of southern Western Australia.
Chap. 9; Characteristics of Aborigines, treatment past & present, origin, initiation rites, white contact from 1606; Hostility of settlers, extermination of Tasmanian Aborigines; Burial practices, general religious beliefs, weapons & implements Chap. 12; Experiences of Millie, daughter of a Jamaican man, Tom Britt, and and an Aboriginal woman, Princess Mudra, of the Borrogorang people.