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9781923042353

An Indigenous South

German writers on colonial South Australia

Peter Monteath, Matthew P. Fitzpatrick

From its earliest years, South Australia was the most German of the Australian colonies.

As they contributed to the founding and consolidation of a British colony, Germans observed the processes of dispossession and subjugation that changed the lives of First Nations peoples around them forever. More than that, they participated in those profound and tragic changes. Importantly, German settlers and visitors left behind records of the events they witnessed.

This volume collects those precious records and makes them available - most for the first time in English - to a modern Australian readership. It charts the course of German-Australian encounters from first contacts, through the ruptures and violence of a relentlessly expanding European presence and into the twentieth century. As it documents the astounding cultural wealth and complexity of Indigenous peoples under siege, it also lays bare the grim logic of the forces driving their world towards destruction.

$39.95

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Peter Monteath, a Fellow of the Alexander von Humboldt Foundation, teaches History in the School of International Studies at Flinders University, Adelaide. His recent books include POW: Australian prisoners of war in Hitler's Reich, Red Professor: The Cold War life of Fred Rose (with Valerie Munt), Interned: Torrens Island 1914-1915 (with Mandy Paul and Rebecca Martin), and the edited collection Germans: Travellers, settlers and their descendants in South Australia.

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Matthew P. Fitzpatrick is a Professor of History and Fellow of the Alexander von Humboldt Foundation at Flinders University, Adelaide, South Australia.

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ISBN   9781923042353
CATEGORY   
IMAGES   Black-and-white images throughout
PAGE COUNT   300
DIMENSIONS   234 x 156 mm