Read more
Where Europeans have been considered "cosmopolitan," the mobility of Indigenous people has either been overlooked or understood only as a consequence of the oppressive expansion of European empires. This volume brings together prominent and emerging scholars who have begun to explore Indigenous networks and "transnational" encounters to consider the broader significance of "extra-local" networks, exchanges, and mobility for Indigenous peoples. It examines a range of analytic scales, including global, regional and intra-Indigenous networks, histories of ideas and cultural forms, and biography, as well as contemporary legacies.
List of contents
Introduction: Indigenous Networks: Historical Trajectories and Contemporary Connections
Jane Carey and Jane Lydon Part I: Imperial Networks from the Mid-Nineteenth Century: Colonial Governance, Humanitarianism and Indigenous Experience 1. The Slave-Owner and the Settler
Catherine Hall 2. Indigenous Engagements with Humanitarian Governance: The Port Phillip Protectorate of Aborigines and "Humanitarian Space"
Alan Lester 3. "The Lying Name of 'Government'": Empire, Mobility and Political Rights
Ann Curthoys Part II: Mobility, Hybridity and Networks: Indigenous Lives and Legacies 4. "The Singular Transcultural Space": Networks of Ships, Mariners, Voyagers and "Native" Men at Sea, 1790-1870
Lynette Russell 5. Indigenous Interlocutors: Networks of Imperial Protest and Humanitarianism in the Mid-Nineteenth Century
Zoë Laidlaw 6. Picturing Macassan-Australian Histories: Odoardo Beccari's 1873 Photographs of the "Orang-Mereghi" and Indigenous Authenticity
Jane Lydon 7.
"Mr. Moses Goes to England": Twentieth-Century Mobility and Networks at the Six Nations Reserve, Ontario
Cecilia Morgan 8. A "Happy Blending"?: Maori Networks, Anthropology and "Native" Policy in New Zealand, the Pacific and Beyond
Jane Carey Part III: Indigenous Networks, Activism and Transnational Exchanges: From the Late Nineteenth Century to the Present 9. Contesting the Empire of Paper: Cultures of Print and Anti-Colonialism in the Modern British Empire
Tony Ballantyne 10. Geographies of Solidarity and the Black Political Diaspora in London Before 1914
Caroline Bressey 11. Marching to a Different Beat: The Influence of the International Black Diaspora on Aboriginal Australia
John Maynard 12. 50 Years of Indigeneity: Legacies and Possibilities
Ravi de Costa Epilogue: Indigenising Transnationalism? Challenges for New Imperial and Cosmopolitan Histories
Jane Carey
About the author
Jane Carey is a lecturer in history at the University of Wollongong. Jane Lydon is the inaugural Wesfarmers Chair in Australian History and an Australian Research Council Future Fellow (2010-14) at the University of Western Australia.