Author(s) |
Maxwell-Stewart, Hamish
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Publication Date |
2019
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Abstract |
<p>This chapter discusses the actual legacy of the convict era was far more complex. As David Roberts points out, views about convicts and their impact on Australian society have rarely been harmonious. While some have argued that the convicts were critical in shaping the cultural identity of Australians, others have downplayed the impact of convict descent. The desire to downplay convict origins was heightened by the nineteenth-century tendency to see crime as a form of infection. Convicts were regarded as a species of malignant disorder that could spread criminal vice to others - a process that could include intergenerational transmission. Most convict labour was assigned or loaned out to private settlers. It has only been with the digitisation of the convict archive that the extent to which punishments rose and fell in line with the costs of maintaining an assigned convict have become apparent.</p>
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Citation |
Historicising Heritage and Emotions: The Affective Histories of Blood, Stone and Land, p. 198-213
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ISBN |
9781315472898
9781138202825
9780367660529
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Link | |
Language |
en
|
Publisher |
Routledge
|
Series |
Routledge studies in heritage
|
Edition |
1
|
Title |
Convict bloodlines: Crime, intergenerational legacies and convict heritage
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Type of document |
Book Chapter
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Entity Type |
Publication
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