Lost history: The Palawa women of Van Diemen’s Land - swimming for their lives?
conference contribution
posted on 2023-05-24, 19:01authored byStronach, M, Hazel Maxwell, O'Shea, M
This paper provides a fleeting glimpse of complex and profound social issues resulting from Australia’s grim colonial history. Government by white settler societies and cultures resulted in exploitation and dispossession of Indigenous traditional lands. Indigenous women’s involvement in sport and physical activity in Australia has reduced over time, seemingly due to the effects of colonization, which continue to impede their capacity to be sport and physically active. As an exemplar, we examine the lost history of women’s swimming, watercraft and aquaculture activities, in pre-annexation Van Diemen’s Land (1803), and during the next thirty years. The Palawa women once had an intimate relationship with water environments and, in keeping with that lifestyle were sound swimmers. Water was a ‘playground’ as well as a source of nourishment and socialisation. Regrettably that knowledge has been largely lost, but the documented routine aquatic pastimes of Tasmania’s Aboriginal women prove there is much yet to be celebrated.
History
Publication title
2019 Sporting Traditions Conference
Department/School
School of Nursing
Event title
2019 Sporting Traditions Conference
Event Venue
Bathurst, NSW
Date of Event (Start Date)
2019-07-01
Date of Event (End Date)
2019-07-04
Repository Status
Restricted
Socio-economic Objectives
Recreation and leisure activities (excl. sport and exercise); Health inequalities; Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander determinants of health