Description
Frontiers were not confined to the bush, backwoods, or borderlands.
Towns and cities at the farthest reaches of empire were crucial to the settler colonial project.
Yet the experiences of Indigenous peoples in these urban frontiers have been overshadowed by triumphant narratives of progress.
This book explores the lives of Indigenous peoples and settlers in two Pacific Rim cities – Victoria, British Columbia, and Melbourne, Australia.
Built on Indigenous lands and overtaken by gold rushes, these cities emerged between 1835 and 1871 in significantly different locations, yet both became cross-cultural and segregated sites of empire.
This innovative study traces how these spaces, and the bodies in them, were transformed, sometimes in violent ways, creating new spaces and new polities.Penelope Edmonds is an Australian Research Council Postdoctoral Fellow in the School of Historical Studies at the University of Melbourne.
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