Samuel Furphy Samuel Furphy i(A152632 works by) (a.k.a. Dr Samuel Furphy)
Gender: Male
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Works By

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1 Governing Natives : Indirect Rule and Settler Colonialism in Australia’s North by Ben Silverstein Samuel Furphy , 2022 single work review
— Appears in: Aboriginal History Journal , no. 46 2022;

— Review of Governing Natives : Indirect Rule and Settler Colonialism in Australia's North Ben Silverstein , 2018 multi chapter work criticism
'Ben Silverstein’s Governing Natives: Indirect Rule and Settler Colonialism in Australia’s North is a deeply researched, theoretically sophisticated and highly readable book, which makes the new and compelling argument that the Aboriginal New Deal, a major reform of Commonwealth policy in the Northern Territory in 1939, can be interpreted as a form of ‘indirect rule’. The book opens with an account of the death in 1937 of a Pintubi man at a pastoral station on the Ormiston River in Central Australia during an intra-tribal argument. This event prompted a visiting patrol officer, Ted Strehlow, to ponder what he should do when (as Silverstein puts it) ‘Aboriginal people had acted as though unconcerned by the spectre of his authority’ (p. 1). Strehlow was unsure as to whether any of those involved should be charged and tried; the applicability of settler law was at least questionable. The case highlighted the problems of physical and jurisdictional coexistence; of Aboriginal people who were essentially self-governing and were also choosing to move through settler spaces around pastoral stations.' (Introduction)
1 The Second World War Home Front Samuel Furphy , 2018 single work criticism
— Appears in: Serving Our Country : Indigenous Australians, War, Defence and Citizenship 2018;
1 The Home Front in the First World War Samuel Furphy , 2018 single work criticism
— Appears in: Serving Our Country : Indigenous Australians, War, Defence and Citizenship 2018;
1 1 Coranderrk: We Will Show the Country [Book Review] Samuel Furphy , 2014 single work review
— Appears in: Aboriginal History , December vol. 38 no. 2014; (p. 189-191)

— Review of Coranderrk : We Will Show the Country Giordano Nanni , Andrea James , 2010 single work drama
1 [Review Essay] : Out of the Silence : The History and Memory of South Australia's Frontier Wars Samuel Furphy , 2014 single work review
— Appears in: Australian Aboriginal Studies , no. 1 2014; (p. 138-139)

— Review of Out of the Silence: The History and Memory of South Australia's Frontier Wars Robert Foster , Amanda Nettelbeck , 2012 single work non-fiction

'The Colony of South Australia was established at a key moment in the history of British interactions with Indigenous peoples from around its empire: the House of Commons was conducting a Select Committee on Aborigines (1835– 37); the anti-slavery campaign had recently won a major victory with the Slavery Abolition Act 1833; and the prevailing wisdom in the Colonial Office was progressive and humanitarian. This mood was reflected in South Australia’s founding documents — in the Letters Patent, which defined the nature and extent of the new colony, and in the Proclamation, which was read by Governor John Hindmarsh on 28 December 1836. These documents asserted the moral right of the British to claim sovereignty over the new colony, but enshrined a commitment to provide legal protection to Aboriginal people as British subjects. The great challenge for the colonial government in realising this vision is one of the key themes of Robert Foster and Amanda Nettelbeck’s fine book, Out of the silence: the history and memory of South Australia’s frontier wars.' (Introduction)

2 4 y separately published work icon Edward M. Curr and the Tide of History Samuel Furphy , Acton : ANU E Press , 2013 Z1922710 2013 single work criticism

'This book is the first comprehensive biography of Curr and explores both his life and legacy. In particular, it considers his posthumous influence on the Yorta Yorta native title case (1994–2001), when his written account of the Yorta Yorta ancestors played a key role in the failure of the claim. By exploring Curr’s interactions with Aboriginal people—as a pastoralist and Aboriginal administrator—this book advocates a more nuanced, critical, and historically informed interpretation of Curr’s ethnological writings than was evident in the Yorta Yorta case.' (Source: Publishers website)

1 'Our Civilisation Has Rolled Over Thee' : Edward M. Curr and the Yorta Yorta Native Title Case Samuel Furphy , 2010 single work criticism
— Appears in: History Australia , December vol. 7 no. 3 2010; (p. 1-16)

'This article explores the role of history in the Yorta Yorta native title case, with a particular focus on the nineteenth-century squatter Edward M Curr's role in the outcome. It begins by describing the crucial importance of historical inquiry to native title proceedings. An account of Curr's life follows, including details that have been lacking in the biographical record to date. The role of Curr's testimony in the Yorta Yorta case is then explored, leading to some final comments about the relationship between law and history. The article concludes that the prominent status granted to Curr's writings, at the expense of Yorta Yorta oral testimony, is symptomatic of a wider disjuncture between legal and historiographical approaches to knowing the past. ' (Source: 'Our Civilisation has rolled over Thee': Edward M. Curr and the Yorta Yorta Native Title Case)

1 y separately published work icon Imperialist Nostalgia and the Tide of History : The Life and Legacy of Edward M. Curr Samuel Furphy , Melbourne : University of Melbourne, School of Historical Studies , 2008 Z1922726 2008 single work thesis
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