Accessibility Tools

  • Content scaling 100%
  • Font size 100%
  • Line height 100%
  • Letter spacing 100%
Print this page

'If I English, I not be hung'

by
March 2010, no. 319

The Unforgiving Rope: Murder and hanging on Australia's western frontier by Simon Adams

UWA Publishing, $32.95 pb, 310 pp

'If I English, I not be hung'

by
March 2010, no. 319

Simon Adams’s thesis is that capital punishment was crucial in how the West was won: ‘The gallows were a potent symbol of an unforgiving social order that was determined to stamp its moral authority over one-third of the Australian continent.’ But hanging was discriminatory; it ‘was never applied fairly or impartially in Western Australia’. Adams points to the fact that ‘there were 17 men hanged between 1889 and 1904, all of whom were “foreigners”: two Afghans, six Chinese, one Malay, two Indians, one Greek, one Frenchman and four Manilamen’, but not a single ‘Britisher’. Capital punishment was racist, reflecting the ‘distortions and prejudices of the British colonial legal system’.

Richard Harding reviews 'The Unforgiving Rope' by Simon Adams

The Unforgiving Rope: Murder and hanging on Australia's western frontier

by Simon Adams

UWA Publishing, $32.95 pb, 310 pp

From the New Issue

You May Also Like