Dangerous Ground or Rich New Research Methods? Using Digital Genealogy to Trace Colonial Mobility

IF 0.1 4区 历史学 Q3 HISTORY Britain and the World Pub Date : 2020-09-01 DOI:10.3366/brw.2020.0346
Sue McCliskie
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引用次数: 2

Abstract

More than 3,000 emigrants took up the New Zealand Company's offer of a free or assisted passage to Nelson, the company's Second Colony of New Zealand, from 1841 to 1844 – but did they stay? This article outlines an academic project that combines genealogy techniques and sources with more conventional research, in order to reveal new information about colonial migrants who are often ‘invisible’ in historical accounts. These were predominantly poor English families (with some Germans, Scots and Irish), and they were part of the earliest stages of British colonisation of New Zealand. Genealogy websites such as Ancestry and FamilySearch proved to be central to this research. They provided a gateway to an astonishing amount of information that could ‘locate’ an individual or family, tying them to a certain place, without the researcher knowing which place to look for. This project highlights some of the limitations and dangers of using genealogy methods and sources in academic research – as well as what might be gained. The results suggest that this kind of hybrid methodology incorporating genealogy research can be used successfully within an academic study. In this project, the intricacies of colonial family networks were illuminated, even though the subjects were poor and continued to move around. Surprisingly high levels of mobility were identified, and this was true of women and children as well as men. These findings suggests that using genealogy to trace patterns of colonial mobility is not only important to gain an understanding of individual lives but may also contribute significantly to a better understanding of the larger processes of migration, colonisation and the history of colonial ‘places’.
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危险的土地还是丰富的新研究方法?使用数字家谱追踪殖民地流动
从1841年到1844年,3000多名移民接受了新西兰公司提供的免费或协助通行到纳尔逊(Nelson)的提议,纳尔逊是新西兰公司在新西兰的第二殖民地——但他们留下来了吗?本文概述了一个学术项目,将家谱技术和资源与更传统的研究相结合,以揭示关于殖民移民的新信息,这些移民在历史记载中往往是“隐形的”。这些人主要是贫穷的英国家庭(还有一些德国人、苏格兰人和爱尔兰人),他们是英国在新西兰殖民的早期阶段的一部分。像Ancestry和FamilySearch这样的家谱网站被证明是这项研究的核心。它们提供了一个通往大量信息的入口,这些信息可以“定位”一个人或一个家庭,将他们与某个地方联系起来,而研究人员不知道该去哪里找。这个项目强调了在学术研究中使用系谱学方法和来源的一些限制和危险,以及可能获得的东西。结果表明,这种结合宗谱研究的混合方法可以在学术研究中成功使用。在这个项目中,殖民地家庭网络的错综复杂被照亮了,尽管主题是贫穷的,并继续四处流动。令人惊讶的是,研究人员发现,女性、儿童和男性的流动性都很高。这些发现表明,使用家谱来追踪殖民地流动模式不仅对了解个人生活很重要,而且可能对更好地理解移民、殖民和殖民地“地方”历史的更大过程有重大贡献。
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0.20
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18
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