Georges Baudoux's Jean M'Barai The Trepang Fisherman

Georges Baudoux's Jean M'Barai The Trepang Fi ...
Karin Speedy, Karin Speedy
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Last edited by MARC Bot
November 16, 2020 | History

Georges Baudoux's Jean M'Barai The Trepang Fisherman

Between 1860 and 1910, Australian governments sanctioned and then tried to stop the trafficking of South Sea Islanders ​to Queensland as forced labourers. Over 60,000 Islanders were lured from their villages: tricked, transported, forced to work in the harsh Queensland bush, and then repatriated. Most Islanders returned with little savings to find their communities deeply scarred by the blackbirding trade and the internecine tribal conflict it had provoked. Georges Baudoux (1865-1949) was brought up amongst the Islanders who experienced the raw and competing greed of French, British and Australian colonialism. Son of a French prison commander stationed in New Caledonia, Baudoux lead a colourful life amongst the Pacific islands and deep in the brousse (bush) before becoming an author and capturing the stories of his travels and, importantly, the experiences of friends and colleagues as life in the islands changed forever. In recognition of his work, he was awarded the esteemed Palmes Académiques, the French medal for literary and academic achievement. Jean M'Barai is one of his best works. Expertly translated by Dr Karin Speedy and published here in English for the first time, this book exposes the rich, complex and brutal world of a South Sea Islander caught up in the duplicitous trade that came to be known as Blackbirding. It is an exciting, provocative and often astonishing account, drawing on the lived experience of people known to the author. In her critical introduction, Dr Speedy uncovers not just the author and his intriguing life (a life that spanned the uprising of the Paris communards in 1870 to post-Second World War reconstruction in the Pacific), but also the challenges for scholars working in, and undertaking translations in, the Francophone/Anglophone colonial/postcolonial sphere. Here, where empires, languages and Pacific peoples collide, the nuances of culture and terminology really matter if we are to find meaning amongst the shifting tides of use. Accompanied by photographs, postcards, cartoons and maps, this is a book to read and re-read, to contemplate ingenuity and inhumanity and the price all cultures pay as they are tested by forces beyond their control. It is a story that still resonates today, as we reflect on the experiences and resilience of the Pacific South Sea Islanders who contributed to modern Australia: the many that left and the descendants of those who stayed.

Publish Date
Publisher
UTS ePRESS
Pages
145

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Edition Availability
Cover of: Georges Baudoux's Jean M'Barai The Trepang Fisherman
Georges Baudoux's Jean M'Barai The Trepang Fisherman
2015, UTS ePRESS

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Book Details


Edition Notes

Open Access Unrestricted online access

Creative Commons by-nc-nd/4.0

English

Published in
Broadway

The Physical Object

Pagination
1 electronic resource (145 p.)
Number of pages
145

ID Numbers

Open Library
OL31369012M
ISBN 13
9780994503916

Source records

marc_oapen MARC record

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November 16, 2020 Created by MARC Bot Imported from marc_oapen MARC record