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Frontier violence. By Aisha, Anna & Vanessa. A deadly encounter. S. Calvert, Mitchell Library Collection. Early violence. Weapons Aboriginals attacked people travelling into remote areas
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Frontier violence By Aisha, Anna & Vanessa
A deadly encounter S. Calvert, Mitchell Library Collection
Early violence • Weapons • Aboriginals attacked people travelling into remote areas • Squatters attacked aboriginals directly (massacres, poisoning, discourse, through publications in newspapers) • Aboriginal’s violence was initially directed at specific people but later changed to more generalized attacks towards white people • Resistance after white settlers crossed the blue mountains
Land, Law & Discourse Aboriginal Perspective • Aboriginal culture of sharing • Their land was taken (resources: food, animals, habitat)
Land, Law & Discourse English Perspective • Aboriginals attacks created fear • Entrenched feelings of superiority, racism, frustration, group mentality • Lack of protection from the government (resentment) • How discourse shaped relations • Aboriginals dehumanization • Law protecting aboriginals • Feelings of being abused by the system (injustice) • Concept of private property (justification) Attack on a settler’s hut Bonwick, James, 1817-1906
Nature and extent of violence • Different forms of violence • Brief summary of the Myall Creek Massacre • Map • Trial
Conclusions • Encounter of two cultures • Reshaping of both cultures • Change