White Without Soap: Philanthropy, Caste and Exclusion in Colonial Victoria 1835-1888 : a Political Economy of RaceExplores the connections between nineteenth century imperial anthropology, racial 'science' and the imposition of colonising governance on the Aborigines of Port Phillip/Victoria between 1835 and 1888. |
Contents
From Philanthropy to Race 18351848 | 30 |
Chapter | 61 |
Chapter Three | 104 |
Chapter Four | 126 |
Chapter Five | 176 |
Chapter | 220 |
Conclusion | 240 |
Yarra my fathers country | 276 |
Common terms and phrases
Aboriginal children Aboriginal Station Aboriginal Studies Aboriginal women Aborigines British Settlements Aborigines of Victoria amongst Anthropology argued asylum August Australian Aboriginal Bamfield Barak Barwick Berry blacks Board BPA Minutes Brough Smyth caste Chief Secretary civil civilising clans Colonial Office colonists colony’s Coranderrk Coranderrk 1998 cultural Curr Darwin Daung wurrung dormitory Ethnological Society European extinction Gipps girls Green half-castes Healesville History Howitt human humanitarian Huxley Hybridity Ibid imperial infanticide John Journal July June Kulin labour land Lorimer Fison mankind March Melbourne University Press miscegenation missionary mixed descent moral natives observed Parliamentary Papers philanthropy population Port Phillip Port Phillip Protectorate Prichard primitive Protectorate race racial rations Rebellion at Coranderrk Report Robert Brough Smyth Robinson Royal Commission savages Science scientific Select Committee Session settlers sexual social evolutionist Society of London species Strzelecki's Sydney theory Thomas Henry Huxley Topinard Trobe William Barak William Thomas Woi wurrung Yarra



