Skip to main content

HRC

  • Home
  • About
    • Welcome
    • Definitions
  • News
  • People
    • Academics & Adjuncts
    • Associate Fellows
    • Honorary Faculty
    • Visiting Fellows
    • HRC Internal Fellows
    • Current PhD students
  • Research
    • Annual Theme
    • Fellowships
    • Public Culture Network
    • Previous Annual Themes
    • ANU Collections News
  • Events
    • Upcoming events
    • HRC Work in Progress Morning Teas
    • Distinguished Lecture Series
    • Public Lectures
    • Science Art Film
    • Cultural Conversations
    • Zooming the Future
    • Conferences
  • Study with us
    • Academic Career Development
    • Graduate Research
    • Pre-doctoral Research
    • National Graduate Student Workshops
  • History
  • Contact us

Partners

  • Australian Museums and Galleries Association (ACT Branch)
  • Australian National Centre for the Public Awareness of Science
  • Australian Studies Institute
  • ANU Collections Hub
  • Centre for Classical Studies
  • Classics Museum
  • Consortium of Humanities Centers and Institutes
  • Freilich Project for the Study of Bigotry
  • Gender Institute
  • Interdisciplinary and Cross-Cultural Research
  • Sydney Social Sciences and Humanities Advanced Research Centre, University of Sydney
  • The Australasian Consortium of Humanities Researchers & Centres
  • The Centre for Creative and Cultural Research, University of Canberra
  • U3A Canberra

Related Sites

  • ANU College of Arts & Social Sciences
  • Research School of Humanities and the Arts
  • Research School of Social Sciences

Administrator

Breadcrumb

HomeEventsVagrant Lives and Colonial Mobility, New Zealand and Australia, 1840s-1890s
Vagrant Lives and Colonial Mobility, New Zealand and Australia, 1840s-1890s

Hand-coloured lithograph by E. Noyce

Vagrant lives and colonial mobility, New Zealand and Australia, 1840s-1890s

My new book (Vagrant Lives in Colonial Australasia, 1840-1920) seeks to place the stories of people who became vagrants at the centre of the narrative about colonial mobility. Along the way, it also explores the many intersections between gender, ‘race’/ethnicity, class, age, and sexuality which are now deeply ingrained in social and cultural historical analysis. The question is to what extent these categories inform and shape our thinking about vagrancy and its prosecution: what does the data tell us, and what surprises are there?

I want to bring the history of vagrancy into view and to the forefront of our thinking about how these different categories work in relation to the prosecution of vagrants. Writing about a much earlier period in England, A. L. Beier described vagrants as ‘masterless men’, but also examined ‘fragmented families’, such as the ‘unstable’ family groups on the road in the early modern period. Vagrancy is most often individualised because of the nature of prosecutions, but there are hints of homeless families in the colonies, children without parents left to fend for themselves, and also the kinds of ‘dangerous liaisons’ that remind us of the array of vagrant identities.

This paper complicates our readings of vagrant identities to uncover the array of vagrant lives in the period, at the same time as it draws upon mobilities scholarship to understand vagrancy in time and place.

Presenter

Professor Catharine Coleborne

Catharine Coleborne is the Head of School of Humanities and Social Science/Dean of Arts at the University of Newcastle and a current Visiting Fellow at the Humanities Research Centre, ANU

This series is an opportunity for our HRC Visiting Fellows to present and receive feedback on the research they are working on. In 2022 , Visiting Fellows are exploring the theme of Mobilities

Register now

Date & time

  • Tue 18 Oct 2022, 4:30 pm - 6:00 pm

Location

CAIS Al-falasi Theatre, Building 127, Ellery Cres ANU

Speakers

  • Professor Catharine Coleborne, University of Newcastle

Event Series

HRC Work in Progress Morning Teas

Contact

  •  HAL Administration
     Send email

File attachments

AttachmentSize
WIPS_Series_SEM2-_Catharine_Coleborne.pdf(289.88 KB)289.88 KB