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Regeneration at Botany Bay

by
September 1983, no. 54

Convict Society and its enemies by J.B. Hirst

Allen & Unwin $19.95, $9.95 pb, 244 pp

Regeneration at Botany Bay

by
September 1983, no. 54

In a major piece of historical revisionism, Dr John Hirst has scrutinised the so-called evils of convict society in New South Wales between 1788 and 1840. Together with a mythology that has stemmed from it. He sees the image of Botany Bay as a place of depravity, where ‘vice is virtue, virtue vice’, as having been created by the opponents of transportation, the late eighteenth-century prison reformers such as John Howard and Jeremy Bentham; he traces their influence through Evangelicals, like Wilberforce, to the liberal Russell and the radical Molesworth who, in the 1830s, saw Australian settlers wallowing with their assignees in a sensual sty. Since the penal colonies would never cleanse themselves, it behoved indignant parliamentarians at Westminster so to do.

John Ritchie reviews 'Convict Society and its enemies' by J.B. Hirst

Convict Society and its enemies

by J.B. Hirst

Allen & Unwin $19.95, $9.95 pb, 244 pp

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