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Regulating 'Mobility' and Masculinity through Institutions in Colonial Victoria, 1870s-1890s

Author: Catharine Coleborne

  • Regulating 'Mobility' and Masculinity through Institutions in Colonial Victoria, 1870s-1890s

    article

    Regulating 'Mobility' and Masculinity through Institutions in Colonial Victoria, 1870s-1890s

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Abstract

David Rollison shows us that ‘mobility’ and ‘settlement’ operated in a dynamic and dialectical relationship in the past. Mobility, he argues, was a force for social change. Social institutions in early modern England, such as families, the Law, and the Church, were not immobile in the face of new populations. Travellers, sojourners, internal migrants and strangers moved through ‘settled’ spaces and featured in everyday life. ‘Thus movement,’ Rollison shows, ‘was literally the necessary condition of the abiding, settled, “structure”’ (Rollison 1999: 10).

How to Cite:

Coleborne, C., (2011) “Regulating 'Mobility' and Masculinity through Institutions in Colonial Victoria, 1870s-1890s”, Law Text Culture 15(1), 45-71.

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Published on
01 Jan 2011