Illustrated with case studies of British colonialism in Australia, Hong Kong, India, Ireland and New Zealand in the later nineteenth and twentieth centuries, the book uncovers the complex and unstable spaces of meaning which were central to the experience of emigrants, settlers, expatriates and indigenous peoples at different time/place moments under British rule.
Dr Lindsay Proudfoot is Reader in Geography at the School of Geography within Queen's University Belfast, UK. Professor Michael Roche is based at the School of People, Environment and Planning, at Massey University, Palmerston North, New Zealand.
Contents: Preface; Introduction: Place, network, and the geographies of Empire, Lindsay Proudfoot and Michael Roche. Part I 'Dis-Locations': Colonial spaces and sites of resistance: landed estates in 19th Century Ireland, Paddy Duffy; The unsettled country: landscape, history, and memory in Australia's Wheatlands, Joy McCann; Place and Presbyterian discourse in Colonial Australia, Lindsay Proudfoot; Irishness, gender and household space in "An Up-country Township", Di Hall. Performing power, demonstrating resistance: interpreting Queen Victoria's visit to Dublin in 1900, Yvonne Whelan. Part II 'Translocations': Environment-identity convergences in Australia, 1880-1950, J.M. Powell; Empire, Duty and land: soldier settlement in New Zealand 1915-1924, Michael Roche; 'Oriental Sore' or 'Public Nuisance': the regulation of prostitution in Colonial India, 1805-1889, M. Satish Kumar; Prostitution and the place of Empire: regulation and repeal in Hong Kong and the British Imperial network, Philip Howell. Part III 'Displacement': Displacement, Lindsay Proudfoot and Michael Roche; Index.