Australian Selectors in the Nineteenth Century and Discrepancies in Imaginings and Realities: Critical Family History

IF 0.8 Q3 ETHNIC STUDIES Genealogy Pub Date : 2023-10-23 DOI:10.3390/genealogy7040078
Andrew Milne
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Abstract

Queensland became an independent state in 1859, separating from New South Wales. Almost immediately, an ambitious plan on migration was embarked upon in order to attract emigrants to Queensland, above all other possible colony destinations in the British Empire. Henry Jordan was instrumental as the Emigration Commissioner (1861–1866) in devising the land order scheme and Richard Daintree, as Agent-General, wooed, through modern techniques on never-before-seen photography in colour, small capitalists to the isolated outreaches of Queensland, where settlement was encouraged. Life there for those that migrated was, however, vastly different from what either they knew in Britain, or what they expected. But, ultimately, they settled, took possession of considerable stretches of lands, as selectors, or pastoral land owners, with disregard for the indigenous populations there. In this article, I examine one migration story on an ancestor in the nineteenth century, Andrew Milne, from London to Queensland, through the lens of critical settler family history theory. I take up the challenge for historians to question who their ancestors were, since the past is telling of the present, and the perceptions that are longed for in the future selves. Namely, in the construction of the future self, an individual must also confront their past, and the lives of those that preceded them. In particular, in the case of Australia, settlement, colonisation, and the possession of land are not benign, and are not isolated events, but have an impact on the present and future lives of both descendants of those that possessed the land, and those from whom it was taken away. The legacy of racial segregation (through the Stolen Generations), and despite the attempt to ‘close the gap’ since 2008, Aboriginal peoples in Australia still suffer the consequences of objectification and dehumanisation to which they were subjected. The consequences are not only financial and economic, but are visible in health, education, social status, and in their mistrust of public services.
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19世纪澳大利亚的选择者和想象与现实的差异:关键的家族史
昆士兰于1859年从新南威尔士州分离出来,成为一个独立的州。几乎立刻,一项雄心勃勃的移民计划开始实施,以吸引移民到昆士兰,而不是大英帝国其他可能的殖民地目的地。亨利·乔丹(Henry Jordan)作为移民专员(1861-1866)在制定土地定购计划方面发挥了重要作用,理查德·戴恩特里(Richard Daintree)作为总代理,通过前所未有的彩色摄影的现代技术,将小资本家吸引到昆士兰偏远地区,鼓励在那里定居。然而,对于那些移民来说,那里的生活与他们在英国所知道的或他们所期望的截然不同。但最终,他们定居下来,占据了大片土地,作为选择者,或牧区土地所有者,无视那里的土著居民。在这篇文章中,我通过批判定居者家族史理论的视角,研究了一个关于19世纪祖先安德鲁·米尔恩从伦敦到昆士兰的移民故事。我接受了历史学家的挑战,质疑他们的祖先是谁,因为过去讲述了现在,人们渴望从未来的自我中获得感知。也就是说,在构建未来自我的过程中,一个人也必须面对自己的过去,以及前人的生活。特别是,在澳大利亚的情况下,定居、殖民和占有土地并不是良性的,也不是孤立的事件,而是对那些拥有土地的人的后代和那些被剥夺土地的人的现在和未来的生活产生影响。种族隔离的遗产(通过被偷走的一代),尽管自2008年以来试图“缩小差距”,澳大利亚的土著人民仍然遭受物化和非人化的后果。其后果不仅体现在财政和经济方面,而且体现在卫生、教育、社会地位以及他们对公共服务的不信任方面。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
0.40
自引率
0.00%
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0
审稿时长
11 weeks
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