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Featured researches published by James Boyce.


Environment and History | 2008

Return to Eden: Van Diemen's Land and the early British settlement of Australia

James Boyce

Tasmania (formerly known as Van Diemenʼs Land) received approximately 72,000 convicts, mainly from the British Isles and Ireland, between 1803 and 1853, and convicts and their descendants formed the large majority of the population of the island colony throughout this time. This article focuses on the environmental experience of this unusual settler population especially in the first decades of settlement. It argues that, contrary to the dominant paradigm of Australian history, the new land was not experienced as a hostile or forbidding place, but a comparatively benign refuge from the brutality of servitude. The argument is put that Australian environmental history has been distorted by a failure to recognise that the rigorous attempts to reproduce English society – social and environmental – were largely undertaken by a relatively small group of free settlers. The dramatically different experience of convict settlers demonstrates the importance of considering the extent to which socio-economic background shaped the environmental encounter.


Archive | 2009

Van Diemen's Land

James Boyce


Archive | 2010

First Australians : an illustrated history

Rachel Perkins; Marcia Langton; Wayne Atkinson; James Boyce; Rg Kimber; Steve Kinnane; Noel Loos; Bruce Pascoe


Environmental History | 2006

Canine Revolution: The Social and Environmental Impact of the Introduction of the Dog to Tasmania

James Boyce


Archive | 2008

Van Diemens Land

James Boyce


Tasmanian Research Association Papers and Proceedings | 2004

A Dog's Breakfast . . . Lunch and Dinner: Canine Dependency in Early Van Diemen's Land

James Boyce


Archive | 2001

Born Bad: Original Sin and the Making of the Western World

James Boyce


Archive | 2017

Losing Streak: How Tasmania was gamed by the gambling industry

James Boyce


History Australia | 2010

Robinson’s journals

James Boyce


National Library of Australia Literary Conference - True Stories: Writing History | 2011

Policy Matters! How 'First Contact' Was Changed Forever by the Government's Sanction of Squatter Conquest in 1836

James Boyce

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Pr Hay

University of Tasmania

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