Illicit Love is a history of love, sex, and marriage between Indigenous peoples and settler citizens at the heart of two settler colonial nations, the United States and Australia. Award-winning historian Ann McGrath illuminates interracial relationships from the late eighteenth to the early twentieth century through stories of romance, courtship, and marriage between Indigenous peoples and colonizers in times of nation formation.
Illicit Love reveals how marriage itself was used by disparate parties for both empowerment and disempowerment and how it came to embody the contradictions of imperialism. A tour de force of settler colonial history, McGrath’s study demonstrates vividly how interracial relationships between Indigenous and colonizing peoples were more frequent and threatening to nation-states in the Atlantic and the Pacific worlds than historians have previously acknowledged.
Ann McGrath is a professor of history and the director of the Australian Centre for Indigenous History at Australian National University. She is the author and editor of numerous books, including How to Write History That People Want to Read; Writing Histories: Imagination and Narration; and Contested Ground: A History of Australian Aborigines under the British Crown. McGrath won the 2016 John Douglas Kerr Medal of Distinction from the Royal Historical Society of Queensland for research and writing Australian history.
Ann McGrath is a professor of history and the director of the Australian Centre for Indigenous History at Australian National University. She is the author and editor of numerous books, including How to Write History That People Want to Read; Writing Histories: Imagination and Narration; and Contested Ground: A History of Australian Aborigines under the British Crown. McGrath won the 2016 John Douglas Kerr Medal of Distinction from the Royal Historical Society of Queensland for research and writing Australian history.
Table of Contents
List of Illustrations Preface: Flowers for the Bride Acknowledgments Introduction: A Perfect Marriage? Part 1. Secrets of New Nations 1. Harriett Gold and Elias Boudinot: Against History? 2. Ernest Gribble and Jeannie Part 2. Marriage and Modernity among the Cherokees 3. Socrates, Cherokee Sovereignty, and the Regulation of White Men 4. John Ross and Mary Bryan Stapler Part 3. Queensland’s Marital Middle Ground 5. Husbands under Surveillance 6. Consent and Aboriginal Wives Part 4. Embodying New Worlds 7. Polygamy’s New Worlds 8. Entwined Sovereignties and the Great Unwedding Epilogue: Transnational Families Notes Bibliography Index