Duffield examines official records relating to the lives of four black convicts (all part of the African diaspora) who were transported to Van Diemen's Land in the 1820s and 1830s. He is particularly interested in the assertive first-person micro-narratives offered by the convicts to the Muster Masters at the time of their arrival in Hobart. Duffield concludes, 'Exciting prospects now open for extensive unpackaging of similar 'I' for an 'Eye' micro-narratives, thus enriching our understanding of the relationships of convict narrative to convict lived experience.'