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Kate Fullagar Kate Fullagar i(A142292 works by)
Gender: Female
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BiographyHistory

'Kate Fullagar teaches history at Macquarie University, and has written on Bennelong in Aboriginal History.'

Most Referenced Works

Personal Awards

2024 winner Hazel Rowley Literary Fellowship for a biography of Marguerite Wolters, an 18th-century spy mistress to empires and revolutionists.
2021 recipient National Library of Australia Fellowships Offered by the Library for 'The Lives of Bennelong and other Indigenous negotiators in the Pacific world, 1750-1820'.
2021 winner New South Wales Premier's Literary Awards Douglas Stewart Prize for Non-Fiction for 'The Warrior, the Voyager, and the Artist: Three lives in an age of empire'.

Awards for Works

y separately published work icon Bennelong and Phillip Cammeray : Simon and Schuster , 2023 26515455 2023 single work biography

The first dual biography of Bennelong and Governor Arthur Phillip, two pivotal figures in Australian history – the colonised and coloniser – and a bold and innovative new portrait of both.

'Bennelong and Phillip were leaders of their two sides in the first encounters between Britain and Indigenous Australians, Phillip the colony’s first governor, and Bennelong the Eora leader. The pair have come to represent the conflict that flared and has never settled.

'Fullargar’s account is also the first full biography of Bennelong of any kind and it challenges many misconceptions, among them that he became alienated from his people and that Phillip was a paragon of Enlightenment benevolence. It tells the story of the men’s marriages, including Bennelong’s best-known wife, Barangaroo, and Phillip’s unusual domestic arrangements, and places the period in the context of the Aboriginal world and the demands of empire.

'To present this history afresh, Bennelong & Phillip relates events in reverse, moving beyond the limitations of typical Western ways of writing about the past, which have long privileged the coloniser over the colonised. Bennelong’s world was hardly linear at all, and in Fullagar’s approach his and Phillip’s histories now share an equally unfamiliar framing.' (Publication summary)

2024 shortlisted The Age Book of the Year Award Non-Fiction Prize
Last amended 27 Apr 2021 12:52:01
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