Work Package 1
a) Book Catalogues of the Colonial Southern Hemisphere (BCCSH)
WP1 resulted in the production of a digital archive of nearly 500 book catalogues, which have now been scanned and made freely available online:
http://www.ucd.ie/southhem/catalogue.html(öffnet in neuem Fenster)A sample description can be seen here:
http://www.ucd.ie/southhem/record.html#13(öffnet in neuem Fenster)The editorial policy is available here:
http://www.ucd.ie/southhem/editorial_policy.html(öffnet in neuem Fenster)The BCCSH archive makes available book catalogues that are not available online elsewhere. The archive offers an important insight into which books were available to readers in the southern hemisphere in the nineteenth century. This, in turn, offers unique insights into the development of literary taste, value, and cultural capital in the region.
b) "Early Public Libraries and Colonial Citizenship in the British Southern Hemisphere" (Palgrave Macmillan, 2019)
Drawing on primary material from the BCCSH digital archive, the SouthHem research team published a gold open access study of six colonial public libraries in nineteenth-century Australia, South Africa, and Southeast Asia. The book examines the important role of these libraries in shaping a programme of Anglophone civic education, scientific knowledge creation, and modernisation in the southern hemisphere:
https://www.palgrave.com/gp/book/9783030204259(öffnet in neuem Fenster)c) Project website and blog:
https://www.ucd.ie/southhem/(öffnet in neuem Fenster)https://southhem.org(öffnet in neuem Fenster)Work Packages 2-4
a) "Worlding the South: Nineteenth-Century Literary Culture and the Southern Settler Colonies" (Manchester UP, 2021)
This gold open access edited collection brings together for the first time literary studies of British colonies in nineteenth-century Australia, New Zealand, South Africa, South America, Southeast Asia, and the South Pacific Islands. The collection offers a groundbreaking challenge to national paradigms and traditional literary periodisations and canons by prioritising southern cultural networks in multiple regional centres, and by examining instances of transculturation between settler, Indigenous, and diaspora peoples:
https://manchesteruniversitypress.co.uk/9781526152886/(öffnet in neuem Fenster)b) The project has produced several important articles on Indigenous contributions to nineteenth-century literary and scientific culture. See, e.g. Megan Kuster, "Global Commodity Chains and Local Use-Value: William Colenso, Natural History Collecting and Indigenous Labour", Journal of Colonialism and Colonial History 22.2 (2021).
c) "Southern Setter Fiction and the Transcolonial Imaginary, 1820-1890"
Extending already published articles on settler fiction (2020, 2021, 2022), this forthcoming monograph posits that the nineteenth-century settler novel can assist us in understanding complex, transitionary modes of settler and migrant cultural identification across and between multiple settler-colonial spaces. It focuses on two themes: 1. the ways in which settler novels encode distinctively regional spatial imaginaries (Australasia, trans-Tasman, Oceania etc); and 2. representations of marginalised or precarious political subjects such as indentured labours, convicts, and mixed-race peoples.