Edward Eyre, Race And Colonial Governance
Description:
Edward Eyre, a mid 19th-century explorer, colonial administrator and colonial governor, is remembered in Australia as the enlightened defender of Aboriginal rights. In England and the Caribbean, he is the reviled 'butcher of Jamaica'. In 1865, in response to an alleged rebellion in Morant Bay, he declared martial law. The result was over 600 floggings, 1000 homes incinerated, and 439 deaths. This book explores Eyre's actions through his perceptions of the colonial encounter with local populations. It looks at the distinctive colonial cultures in which he lived-Australia, New Zealand and Jamaica-and the broader imperial obligations that framed his administrations. His interventions in Australia and Jamaica reflected a correlation between race, resistance and repression that characterized British colonialism. In New Zealand, where he was responsible for the development of administrative structures and the purchase of Maori lands for settlement, his term provides a case study of Britain's interest in establishing settler colonies.
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