Edward Eyre : race and colonial governance

Author(s)

    • Evans, Julie

Bibliographic Information

Edward Eyre : race and colonial governance

Julie Evans

University of Otago Press, 2005

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Note

Includes bibliographical references (p. [179]-190) and index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

Edward Eyre, the mid-nineteenth century explorer, colonial administrator, and later colonial governor, it remembered as the enlightened defender of Aboriginal rights in Australia, and as the reviled 'butcher of Jamaica' in England and the Caribbean. In 1865. Eyre declared martial law in response to an alleged rebellion in Morant Bay, Jamaica, resulting in 439 deaths, over 600 'floggings', and over 1000 homes incinerated. This book explores Eyre's actions through his perceptions of the colonial encounter. It looks at the distinctive colonial cultures in which he lived and works, and the boarder imperial obligations that framed his administrations. Eyre's interventions in Australia and Jamaica reflected a correlation between race, resistance, and repression that characterised British colonialism. Britain's interest in establishing settler colonies is discussed using New Zealand as a case study. Eyre spent six years as Lieutenant-Governor in New Zealand and was responsible for the development of administrative structures and the purchase of Maori lands for settlement.

Table of Contents

  • Unsettling Encounters -- New Ways of Knowing
  • Ordering the Chaos of Personal Experience
  • Sharing Sovereignty in Aotearoa/New Zealand
  • Securing British Sovereignty in New Zealand
  • Defending British Sovereignty within the Caribbean
  • Race and Colonial Governance in the Caribbean, 1854-66
  • Defending British Sovereignty in Jamaica, 1862-66
  • Spinning Out of Control
  • Index.

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