
Hobart Silent Book Club | August
Fullers Bookshop, 131 Collins Street, Hobart, TAS 7000 The Hobart Silent Book Club chapter meets…
The history of the First Tasmanians is a story of ingenuity, adaptation and resilience.
In First Tasmanians historian Shayne Breen traces the 40,000 years of Aboriginal exploration, land settlement, hunting practices and controlled burning on the island. The First Tasmanians were committed to the terms of life set down by creation ancestors, their hunting and gathering skills a source of wonder to observant colonists. These skilled practitioners of land management universally respected local autonomy, and their seasonal journeys enhanced social interaction as they negotiated momentous changes in climate, vegetation and topography. Social cohesion was fostered through singing, dancing and storytelling around the evening campfire, and rituals and networks were maintained across life on earth and the afterlife.
In thirty short years of the nineteenth century, this carefully nurtured collective life was destroyed by an imperial power, to be replaced by a narrative of Aboriginal resistance, struggle and protest. Multiple genocidal policies left contemporary First Tasmanians with a complex legacy of historical grief, chronic disadvantage and intergenerational trauma, a legacy that endures to this day.
First Tasmanians is the first interdisciplinary account of Tasmanian Aboriginal history told in three movements: the deep hunter-gatherer past; the collective life at the time of the British invasion; and the recent past. It is a story of courage, continuity and an unwavering commitment to revitalising connections between country, culture and community.
Shayne Breen is an interdisciplinary historian who has worked closely with Tasmanian Aboriginal people for 35 years. During the 1990s he helped lead the introduction of Aboriginal Studies at the University of Tasmania. In 2001 he received a University of Tasmania Vice-Chancellor’s Teaching Excellence Award. More recently he worked with Aboriginal Education Services in the Tasmanian Education Department, helping to revise the Aboriginal Studies curriculum in Tasmania’s schools. His research interests include deep history, colonial genocide, Australia’s history wars and Tasmanian Aboriginal history. This is his third book.
In conversation with Shayne is Professor Greg Lehman, a well-known Tasmanian art historian, curator, poet, essayist and commentator on Indigenous identity and place, who is descended from the Trawulwuy people of north-east Tasmania. Greg is Pro Vice-Chancellor, Aboriginal Leadership at the University of Tasmania. His research spans Indigenous cultural values, land and fire management to representation of Indigenous people in colonial art.
Join Shayne and Greg at the Afterword Cafe.
Ticket Type | Price | Cart |
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First Tasmanians | Shayne Breen | $12.00 |
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