Issue Details: First known date: 2023... 2023 Fragmented Lives, Fragmentary Archives : Collective Biography in Australian Convict History
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AbstractHistoryArchive Description

'The transportation of convicts to Australia was a substantial bureaucratic undertaking. From 1788 to 1868, some 163,000 people were transported to its shores. Underpinning this mass movement of people were various processes for documenting individuals that amounted to what convict historians have termed a ‘paper panopticon’, so called because of the variably immense and detailed nature of the information recorded about convicts and their lives.  These data ranged from essential biographical information, such as the age, native place and occupation of convicts, to descriptions of their physical characteristics. As the historian Janet McCalman has recently written, the ‘men, women and children in the Tasmanian convict records are arguably the most carefully described and recorded ordinary people of the nineteenth- century world’.  The convicts transported to New South Wales and Western Australia were not far behind them. While the surviving archives for those colonies are in some ways less varied and detailed than their Van Diemen’s Land counterparts, they nonetheless offer promising opportunities for detailed reconstructions of individual lives. Complementing, supplementing and enriching convict records has been the ongoing digitisation of archival material—including vital life records, newspapers, gaol and immigration records—most relevant to tracing the lives of these people. What emerges from the consolidation of these sources is, in McCalman’s words, the ‘demographic contours of lives’.' (Introduction)

Publication Details of Only Known VersionEarliest 2 Known Versions of

  • Appears in:
    y separately published work icon Australian Journal of Biography and History Convict Lives no. 7 2023 26054237 2023 periodical issue criticism biography

    'This special issue of the Australian Journal of Biography and History explores the lives of convicts transported to Australia and asks how they can be investigated through various forms of biography. Given the ever-increasing range of methodologies for researching convict lives, this issue offers a timely reflection on their varying strengths, limitations and functions as well as on the future of convict history research. Nine refereed articles and two research notes provide new insights into various aspects of convict lives and experiences, combined with broad discussions on methodology.

    'In their introductory article, Matthew Cunneen and Malcolm Allbrook delve into the history of convict biography and the ways previous historians have attempted to explore and understand such lives. To overcome the gaps and silences in the archives, they argue, historians of convict Australia should employ a range of methodologies that each have their own particular domains of enquiry. In her research note, Janet McCalman reflects on the historiographical discoveries that have been made possible by the digitising, indexing and linking of convict records. She calls for future researchers to continue the work behind large datasets so that one day a fully comprehensive database of convicts can be created. Adopting a more fine-grained approach, Jennifer Bird reconstructs in detail from the archives the penal life of the convict Robert Edward Knox. Her analysis of Knox demonstrates an alternative to big-data approaches for understanding convict agency.

    'With a similarly refined scope—though one that looks at the convict system from the outside in—Jennifer Brookes examines the struggles of Lydia Anne to join her transported husband, Laurence Hynes Halloran, in Australia. Brookes’s article suggests that historians might consider how contemporary understandings of convicts can be enhanced by studying the lives of non-convicts associated with transportation. Matthew Cunneen reconstructs the lives of three convicts to further inform the experiences of people of colour under transportation. He argues for collective biography as a way of bridging the methodological shortcomings of purely biographical and prosopographical approaches. In the first large-scale study of the subject, Patricia Downes examines the social and legal conditions that saw freely arrived British soldiers sentenced to transportation within the Australian colonies. Complicating old narratives of the soldiers as contaminated by the convicts around them, she explores how military crimes resulting in transportation were sometimes driven by desires for freedom from military life and to protest service conditions.

    'Christine Fernon reports in her research note on the progress made in the National Centre of Biography’s First Three Fleets and Their Families project, an ambitious intergenerational study of Australia’s early colonial history. The preliminary findings give a sense of the insights that the project will provide into how convict lives formed the fabric of Australian colonial history. Kristyn Harman and Anthony Ray explore the intergenerational effects of the convict system through the experiences of three convicts of colour. In analysing these lives, they contribute to our understanding of interracial marriage, family formation and recidivism in Van Diemen’s Land. Hamish Maxwell-Stewart, David Andrew Roberts and Mark McLean draw on a wealth of convict records to show the potential of using big data to analyse thousands of convict lives in parallel. Doing so would allow the individual to be contextualised within the greater population and would present opportunities for temporal and spatial analysis, thereby deepening understandings of British criminal management.

    Visually illustrating the potential of big data in studies of convict protest and collective biography, Monika Schwarz examines collective resistance networks in female factories in Van Diemen’s Land. She draws together the stories of previously unconnected women and uncovers episodes of resistance. Returning convict history to its material origins, Richard Tuffin, Martin Gibbs, David Roe and Sylvana Szydzik draw on archaeological methods of digital technology to recontextualise convict lives. By mapping sites of convict labour and quantifying the outputs from them, the authors collectively argue that adopting multi-scalar and multidisciplinary approaches to studying convict environments can deeply enhance the histories of those who were involved with them. This issue deepens understandings of Australia’s convicts, the lives they led and the ways historians can best study them.' (Publication summary)

    2023
    pg. 75-93
Last amended 4 Jul 2023 10:45:37
75-93 Fragmented Lives, Fragmentary Archives : Collective Biography in Australian Convict Historysmall AustLit logo Australian Journal of Biography and History
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