Female Convicts as Women Travellers: an investigation into how the itineraries of convict experience affected life narratives
For convict women sent to Australia, 'transportation' meant international travel. By mapping the convicts
as travellers, this project will afford a new perspective on women whose convict itineraries radically affected the direction of their lives. Alert to the specifics of time and place, the project investigates the carceral and non-carceral experiences of women whose shared voyage as convicts was neither the beginning nor the end of their travels. The research involves a systematic cluster sampling of three ships which sailed to Van Diemen's Land while transportation was at its height: the Harmony (1829), Atwick (1838), and Elizabeth and Henry (1847).
|