Pearls of Exploitation. "Settlers, Servants and Slaves: Aboriginal and European Children in Nineteenth-Century Western Australia" by Penelope Hetherington. [review]

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Date
2003-04
Authors
Brock, Peggy
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Publisher
Australian Book Review
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Abstract
Penelope Hetherington has found that in nineteenth-century Western Australian colonial society childhood is not easily delineated. Her solution to this problem of definition is to look at how childhood was defined in legislation and censuses. Even here she runs into problems. Under British law imported to the colony on the Swan River, people were deemed infants until the age of twenty-one. In reality, childhood in the colony was socially constructed according to the gender, class and ethnicity of the child and the labour needs of the colony. For most children, childhood, or dependence on adults, ended around the age of fourteen or fifteen. Childhood as portrayed in "Settlers, Servants & Slaves" is not the carefree idyll of the romantics, but the hard truth of exploitation and cruelty experienced by the working class. These lives are glimpsed through the legislative and institutional framework established by the state, rather than the subjective experiences of individuals. Hetherington found that childhood and children's lives were not easily accessed through the archival records. Much of her data had to be extrapolated from more general records and statistics.
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Australian, Book Reviews, Publishing
Citation
Brock, Peggy 2003. Pearls of Exploitation. Review of "Settlers, Servants and Slaves: Aboriginal and European Children in Nineteenth-Century Western Australia" by Penelope Hetherington. 'Australian Book Review', No 250, April, 15-16.