Boundary Crossers: The hidden history of Australia's other bushrangers
By (Author) Meg Foster
NewSouth Publishing
NewSouth Publishing
1st November 2022
Australia
General
Non Fiction
994.030922
Paperback
240
Width 153mm, Height 234mm
Bushrangers are Australian legends. Ned Kelly, Ben Hall, Captain Thunderbolt and their bushranging brothers are famous. Theyre remembered as folk heroes and celebrated for their bravery and their ridicule of inept and corrupt authorities. But not all Australian bushrangers were seen in this glowing light in their own time. And not all were white men.
In Boundary Crossers, historian Meg Foster reveals the stories of bushrangers who didnt fit the mould. African American man Black Douglas, who was seen as the terror of the Victorian goldfields, Sam Poo, known as Australias only Chinese bushranger, Aboriginal man Jimmy Governor, who was renowned as a mass murderer, and Captain Thunderbolts partner, Aboriginal woman Mary Ann Bugg, whose extraordinary exploits extended well beyond her time as the Captains Lady.
These bushrangers remarkable lives have been forgotten, obscured, misrepresented or erased from the national story for over a century, and this is no accident. All is not as it appears. There is far more to these bushrangers, and their histories, than immediately meets the eye.
A spellbinding journey into Australias iconic bushranging history as you have never imagined it. Grace Karskens
A refreshing riposte to familiar bushranging folklore. Billy Griffiths
Thrilling detective worka true history of Australias troubles with race, sex and gender, troubles that havent gone away. David Marr
Full of intriguing detail, colourful stories and challenging ideas, Boundary Crossers offers new context for some of Australias great central legends. Alan Atkinson
An unknown and riveting side of bushrangingstories of people who should never have been forgotten. Jason Phu
Boundary Crossers is excellent Australian history, thought-provoking and illuminating. Julia Taylor, Books + Publishing
With considerable investigative skill, Foster rescues now forgotten figures, such as Chinese bushranger Sam Poo and Aboriginal man Jimmy Governor, from obscurity and places them in a vivid historical context. Fascinating. Canberra Weekly
Dr Meg Foster is an award-winning historian of bushranging, banditry, settler colonial and public history, and a Research Fellow at the University of Cambridge. She was awarded the 2018 Aboriginal History Award from the History Council of New South Wales, has published publications like Overland and Australian Book Review, and has a passion for connecting history with the contemporary world. Meg received her PhD in history from the University of New South Wales in March 2020.