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May Joseph, Pratt Institute, New York, USA
"While the authors wisely eschew any totalising narrative for the set of biographies they have presented, they do note that thissmall-scale history - the story of Wadjemup - is connected to a broader phenomenon of unfree labour which proliferated withthe Indian Ocean from the nineteenth century, in part because of the remoteness of this ocean itself from European populationcentres. As Curthoys, Konishi, and Ludewig set out compellingly in their opening discussion, the island's separateness aff ords inot only physical but also psychological distance from and for those who control it from the mainland."
Georgina Arnott, Australian Book Review, July 2023, no. 455
"In this exceptional co-authored book, Ann Curthoys, Shino Konishi and Alexandra Ludewig tell a compelling new history of Wadjemup/Rottnest. They reframe the island, 19 kilometres off the Western Australian (WA) coast, as part of a connected Indian Ocean and narrate its history through the lives of those who 'sojourned' there (1). The book presents the island's layered history: as a 'place where the spirits are taken', to Noongar people (4); as a landing site for early European expeditions; as a prison island for 3,700 Aboriginal people; as a site of internment for more than 1,100 German and Austro-Hungarian civilians in World War I; as a military base in World War II; and as a holiday resort in the twentieth century."
Katherine Roscoe, Australian Historical Studies, Book Review, August 2023, DOI: 10.1080/1031461X.2023.2233137