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Emeritus Professor Lyndall Ryan

Emeritus Professor

School of Humanities, Creative Ind and Social Sci (History)

Behind masked massacres

The story of Professor Lyndall Ryan from Newcastle's Centre for the History of Violence began in her mid twenties when she was knee deep in archives in Hobart - a "historian's delight" in her words - documenting the history of Tasmania's convict system.

Professor Lyndall Ryan"I was a research assistant at the time for Professor Manning Clark at the Australian National University in Canberra. He was working on Volume 2 of his six volume History of Australia and dispatched me to Hobart for six weeks, to uncover details of Governor Arthur's policies.

It was during this six-week sojourn that the archivist showed her the 18 volumes of letters and reports on Tasmania's Black War in the 1820s. He then suggested that if she were considering postgraduate study they would make a wonderful topic.

"This really whet my appetite. I kept coming back to the idea time and time again, and then decided to follow through with the archivist's proposal."

This decision was a pivotal moment, carving Lyndall's path for the next 40 years as a leading academic on Aboriginal, Australian and Feminist history.

"People had assumed that Tasmanian Aboriginals had died out but what we discovered was that in fact, they were well and truly alive."

Following her thesis research, Lyndall published her first book in 1981 called The Aboriginal Tasmanians, which documented the extraordinary and dramatic history of Tasmanian Aborigines from first colonisation to the present.

As an Australian historian, Lyndall says she is bestowed with a responsibility to present the available facts and figures in a way that people can understand and come to terms with the events of the past.

"The more research I do, the more dumbfounded I am by the amount of violence and brutality that actually took place."

"Invaluable new knowledge is constantly being brought to the surface, which is critical to comprehending who we are today and the reasons behind why Aboriginal communities are faced with the current state of social circumstances," she explained.

In November 2013, Lyndall and Dr Jonathon Richards from the University of Queensland were awarded an Australian Research Council (ARC) Grant to pursue their enquiry into the violence, which took place on the Australian colonial frontier from 1788 through to 1960.

"There are gaps in our knowledge and inaccuracies masked by blank walls," said Lyndall.

"People still do not want to talk about what took place on this land not all that long ago, which indicates that we have more work to do… This project is designed to use new analytical methods to study how Aborigines and settlers were killed on the Australian frontier," she continued.

Lyndall and Johnathon will be producing new estimates of casualties by scrutinising archives, books, texts, newspapers, and stories recording the massacres – any sources they can get their hands on from the time – to produce a collaborative and coherent assessment, which will be made accessible online in the form of an interactive map.

"Sadly, there is still so little known, especially in NSW. There are snippets of information but no one has yet pieced together the overall picture."

"The stories are not dead either. They exist today in a profound way and it is our job to bring those to stories to light in a way that people are prepared to look at it. That's the challenge: finding a way to present this ever so critical information in a way that engages people and encourages them to learn more," she shared.

"It is also significant for Aboriginal communities and the healing process. They want the past to be acknowledged and we have a distinct role to play in creating opportunities for justice."

Discussing career climaxes, Lyndall shares of a steep learning curve that rocked her reputation and research some ten years ago. "I was accused of fabricating frontier massacres in my research and my career was severely under the gun. It was a traumatizing experience and generated enormous publicity. I thought for some time why I was in this line of work if I was going to be treated like this. But it taught me that you have to be prepared to be crticised as a historian because you are exposing information and truths many do not want to hear."

Looking ahead, Lyndall is diligently juggling multiple projects in different stages of development.

Along with director Professor Philip Dwyer and Professor Roger Markwick, Lyndall established the Centre for the History of Violence within the Faculty of Education and Arts three years ago. One of the trio's motivations was to address the blanket of silence that surrounded the topic of massacre..

Lyndall says that it wasn't until the July 1995 Srebrenica massacre, which claimed the lives of more than 7000 Bosnian Muslims, that European scholars were awoken to the importance of massacre as a subject of study. Since then important new research has appeared, including by Professor Dwyer and herself.

One important ARC-funded collaborative research project coming to fruition is titled Colonisation and Massacres 1780-1820, with Lyndall covering Australia and Oceania; Philip investigating the Napoleonic spread into Eastern Europe; Nigel Penn from the University of Cape Town focusing on South Africa; and Native American Professor Barbara Mann from the University of Toledo, Ohio, investigating the frontiers of Michigan and Ohio – then outside the boundaries of the new American republic.

Comparing and contrasting these four areas of investigation, the group expects to produce a book in the coming year.

"There are important differences and interesting similarities, it is a very exciting project," Lyndall says, adding that the remoteness of history helps soften the blow of what can be gruesome subject matter.

"The distance of the past gives you a sense that you can stand back and look at it. As historians, we have the luxury of working outside the heat of the moment, and it allows us to be sceptical, to look at things with a piercing eye.

"It's more like detective work and it's always very interesting to explore the context in which these incidents occurred. It is the past, and that helps, and once you've found a few clues, of course, you have to stay on the scent."

A new project to be led by Lyndall is also in development involving six scholars from three universities who aim to determine the links between intimacy and violence in white settler societies on the Pacific Rim (including Australia, New Zealand, Canada and western USA) from 1830 – 1930.

"We are trying discover how well people on both sides of the frontier actually knew each other. It appears that, they knew each other quite well before, during and after the violence," said Lyndall.

Lyndall Ryan

Behind masked massacres

The story of Professor Lyndall Ryan from Newcastle's Centre for the History of Violence began when she started documenting Tasmania's convict history

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Career Summary

Biography

Research expertise

Australian History

Aboriginal History

Feminist History

Administrative expertise

1986-1998: Head of the Women's Studies Program, Flinders University of South Australia

1999-2003: Head of the School of Humanities at the University of Newcastle, Ourimbah Campus 

2004-2005: Director of Research, School of Humanities at the University of Newcastle, Ourimbah Campus 


Qualifications

  • PhD, Macquarie University
  • Master of Arts Qualifying, Australian National University
  • Bachelor of Arts/Diploma of Education, University of Sydney

Keywords

  • Aboriginal History
  • Australian History
  • Australian Studies
  • Feminist History
  • Women's Studies

Professional Experience

Academic appointment

Dates Title Organisation / Department
1/1/2013 -  Membership - ARC College of Experts - HCA Panel ARC College of Experts - HCA Panel
Australia
1/10/1998 - 1/7/2005 Foundation Professor of Australian Studies University of Newcastle
School of Humanities and Social Science
Australia
1/1/1988 - 31/12/2010 Membership - Australian Women's Studies Association Australian Women's Studies Association
Australia
1/6/1986 - 1/8/1998 Reader/ Professor of Women's Studies Flinders University
Faculty of Social Sciences
Australia
1/1/1986 - 31/12/2010 Membership - Association of Canadian Studies in Australia and New Zealand Association of Canadian Studies in Australia and New Zealand
Australia
1/1/1985 -  Membership - International Association of Australian Studies International Association of Australian Studies
Australia
1/1/1979 -  Membership - Australian Historical Association Australian Historical Association
Australia
1/12/1977 - 1/6/1986 Lecturer/Senior Lecturer Griffith University
School of Humanities
Australia

Invitations

Distinguished Visitor

Year Title / Rationale
2009 How Many? The doctrine of the self-exterminating and its influence on the historical debate about estimating the Aboriginal population in Tasmania in 1803
Organisation: Riawunna, University of Tasmaia, Hobart Campus Description: How Many? The doctrine of the self-exterminating and its influence on the historical debate about estimating the Aboriginal population in Tasmania in 1803
2006 Massacre in Tasmania: How Do We Know?
Organisation: University of Adelaide Description: 'Massacre in Tasmania: How Do We Know?' Barr Smith Library Research Lecture Series,

Keynote Speaker

Year Title / Rationale
2004 'Risdon Cove: Contested Site in Tasmanian History'
Organisation: University of Newcastle Description: Plenary Address: Australian Historical Association Conference

Participant

Year Title / Rationale
1998 'Imagined Republics: Australia in the 21st Century'.
Organisation: University of Newcastle Description: Inaugural Lecture, Foundation Chair in Australian Studies,
1997 'The Struggle for Trukanini'
Organisation: Tasmanian Historical Research Association, Hobart Description: 'The Struggle for Trukanini'

Speaker

Year Title / Rationale
1985 'The Queensland Government and Aboriginal Policy Making 1859-1984'
Organisation: Griffith University Description: Griffith University Research Lecture, Brisbane
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Publications

For publications that are currently unpublished or in-press, details are shown in italics.


Book (3 outputs)

Year Citation Altmetrics Link
2018 Remembering the Myall Creek Massacre, NewSouth, Sydney, 215 (2018)
2012 Dwyer PG, Ryan L, Theatres of Violence: Massacre, Mass Killing and Atrocity throughout History, Berghahn Books, New York, 323 (2012) [A3]
Citations Scopus - 19
Co-authors Philip Dwyer
2012 Ryan L, Tasmanian Aborigines: A History Since 1803, Allen & Unwin, Crows Nest, 418 (2012) [A1]

Chapter (21 outputs)

Year Citation Altmetrics Link
2020 Ryan L, 'The struggle for recognition: Part-Aborigines in Bass Strait in the nineteenth century', Terrible Hard Biscuits: A reader in Aboriginal History 94-122 (2020)
2020 Ryan L, 'Establishing a code of silence: Civilian and state complicity in genocidal massacres on the New South Wales Frontier, 1788-1859', Civilian-Driven Violence and the Genocide of Indigenous Peoples in Settler Societies, UCT Press, Claremont, ZA 114-138 (2020) [B1]
2018 Ryan L, 'Martial Law in the British Empire', Cambridge Imperial and Post-Colonial Studies 93-109 (2018)

Martial law was a flexible mechanism of coercion and repression that was widely used by colonial governors in the British Empire to suppress a wide variety of insurgencies. Its or... [more]

Martial law was a flexible mechanism of coercion and repression that was widely used by colonial governors in the British Empire to suppress a wide variety of insurgencies. Its origins lay in the powers of the royal prerogative of the English monarchy until the Glorious Revolution in 1689, when its use was the restricted in England by the rule of law. In the Empire however, it remained firmly embedded in the reserve powers of colonial governors who used it with impunity to suppress insurgency and rebellion. The chapter explores a range of cases of martial law in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries and concludes that the Empire was far more vulnerable to insurgency than most historians believe.

DOI 10.1007/978-3-319-62923-0_5
Citations Scopus - 2
2018 Ryan L, 'The Australian Agricultural Company, the Van Diemen s Land Company: Labour Relations with Aboriginal Landowners, 1824 1835', Cambridge Imperial and Post-Colonial Studies 25-43 (2018)

When the Australian Agricultural Company and the Van Diemen¿s Land Company took up their vast land grants in New South Wales and Van Diemen¿s Land in the mid 1820s, they were conf... [more]

When the Australian Agricultural Company and the Van Diemen¿s Land Company took up their vast land grants in New South Wales and Van Diemen¿s Land in the mid 1820s, they were confronted by the Aboriginal landowners. This chapter explores their responses to the Aboriginal people by focusing on their divergent employment policies. The chapter finds that the Australian Agricultural Company promoted Aboriginal labour to ensure their survival and the Van Diemen¿s Land Company promoted their removal in the belief that they were destined to die out.

DOI 10.1007/978-3-319-76231-9_2
Citations Scopus - 2
2018 Ryan L, 'The Myall Creek massacre: Was it typical of the time?', Remembering the Myall Creek Massacre, NewSouth, Sydney 85-99 (2018)
2018 Ryan L, ''A very bad business': Henry Dangar and the Myall Creek massacre 1838', Remembering the Myall Creek Massacre, NewSouth, Sydney 15-37 (2018)
2018 Ryan L, 'Introduction: Remembering Myall Creek', Remembering the Myall Creek Massacre, NewSouth, Sydney 1-14 (2018) [B1]
2018 Ryan L, 'The Myall Creek massacre: Was it typical of the time?', Remembering the Myall Creek Massacre, NewSouth, Sydney 85-99 (2018)
2018 Ryan L, ''A very bad business': Henry Dangar and the Myall Creek massacre 1838', Remembering the Myall Creek Massacre, NewSouth, Sydney 15-37 (2018)
2018 Maynard JM, 'Myall Creek memories', Remembering the Myall Creek Massacre, NewSouth, Sydney 111-129 (2018) [B1]
Co-authors John Maynard
2016 Dwyer PG, Ryan L, 'On Genocide and Settler-Colonial Violence: Australia in Comparative Perspective', The United Nations and Genocide, Palgrave Macmillan, Basingstoke 32-53 (2016) [B1]
Co-authors Philip Dwyer
2015 Ryan L, ''No right to the land': The role of the wool industry in the destruction of aboriginal societies in Tasmania (1817-1832) and Victoria (1835-1851) compared', Genocide on Settler Frontiers: When Hunter-Gatherers and Commercial Stock Farmers Clash 185-209 (2015)
Citations Scopus - 1
2012 Dwyer PG, Ryan L, 'Introduction:The massacre and history', Theatres of Violence: Massacre, Mass Killing and Atrocity throughout History, Berghahn Books, New York xi-xxv (2012) [B1]
Citations Scopus - 7
Co-authors Philip Dwyer
2012 Ryan L, 'Settler massacres on the Australian Colonial Frontier, 1836-1851', Theatres of Violence: Massacre, Mass Killing and Atrocity throughout History, Berghahn Books, New York 94-109 (2012) [B1]
2012 Ryan L, 'Settler Massacres on the Australian colonial frontier, 1836-1851', Theatres of Violence: Massacre, Mass Killing, and Atrocity Throughout History 120-135 (2012)
Citations Scopus - 9
2010 Ryan L, ''Hard evidence': The debate about massacre in the Black War in Tasmania', Passionate Histories: Myth, Memory and Indigenous Australia, ANU E Press, Canberra 39-50 (2010) [B1]
2008 Ryan L, 'Historians, friendly mission and the contest for Robinson and Trukanini', Reading Robinson: Companion Essays to Friendly Mission, Quintus Publishing, Hobart, Tasmania 147-159 (2008) [B1]
2004 Ryan L, 'Australian Studies - The Germinal Texts: 1978-1982', Thinking Australian Studies teaching across cultures, University of Queensland Press, St Lucia 42-59 (2004) [B1]
2003 Ryan L, 'Who Is the Fabricator?', Whitewash: On Keith Windschuttle's Fabrication of Aboriginal History, Black Inc, Melbourne 230-257 (2003) [B1]
2003 Ryan L, 'Waterloo Creek, northern NSW, 1838', Frontier Conflict: The Australian Experience, National Museum of Australia, Canberra 33-43 (2003) [B1]
2002 Ryan L, 'Remembering the Australian Women's Weekly in the 1950s', Who Was That Woman? The Australian Women's Weekly in the Post War Years., University of New South Wales Press, Sydney 55-66 (2002) [B1]
Show 18 more chapters

Journal article (72 outputs)

Year Citation Altmetrics Link
2021 Ryan L, 'Newspaper evidence of colonial frontier massacres in Australia', History Australia, 18 845-849 (2021) [C1]

Australian newspapers on Trove provide important evidence of massacre on the Australian colonial frontier. Stage 3 of the digital map of frontier massacre sites across colonial Au... [more]

Australian newspapers on Trove provide important evidence of massacre on the Australian colonial frontier. Stage 3 of the digital map of frontier massacre sites across colonial Australia, 1788¿1930, includes evidence from more than sixty Australian newspapers on Trove. Of the 312 massacre sites on the map, sources for 235 of them, that is more than two thirds, are provided by newspapers. To demonstrate how the research team has deployed newspapers on Trove, this article interrogates two case studies of frontier massacre, one from the Black War in Tasmania in the 1820s and the other from north-eastern Victoria in the 1840s. The article finds an important connection between truth telling about frontier massacre and newspaper evidence on Trove. Newspapers rather than official reports often appear more likely to provide the evidence of massacre on the Australian colonial frontier.

DOI 10.1080/14490854.2021.1993747
Citations Scopus - 3
2019 Ryan L, 'The Civilisation of Port Phillip: Settler Ideology, Violence, and Rhetorical Possession', AUSTRALIAN HISTORICAL STUDIES, 50 268-269 (2019)
DOI 10.1080/1031461X.2019.1598327
2018 Nettelbeck A, Ryan L, 'Salutary Lessons: Native Police and the "Civilising' Role of Legalised Violence in Colonial Australia', JOURNAL OF IMPERIAL AND COMMONWEALTH HISTORY, 46 47-68 (2018) [C1]
DOI 10.1080/03086534.2017.1390894
Citations Scopus - 16Web of Science - 7
2018 Ryan L, 'Dancing with the King: The Rise and Fall of the King Country, 1864-1885', BRITAIN AND THE WORLD, 11 260-262 (2018)
DOI 10.3366/brw.2018.0304
2016 Dwyer PG, Ryan L, 'Reflections on Genocide and Settler-Colonial Violence', History Australia, 13 335-350 (2016) [C1]
Citations Scopus - 12
Co-authors Philip Dwyer
2016 Ryan L, 'Settler Society in the Australian Colonies: self-government and imperial culture', SOCIAL HISTORY, 41 225-226 (2016)
DOI 10.1080/03071022.2016.1148365
2015 Ryan L, 'Remembering the Modoc War: Redemptive Violence and the Making of American Innocence', JOURNAL OF AMERICAN HISTORY, 102 887-888 (2015)
DOI 10.1093/jahist/jav602
2015 Ryan L, 'The Last Man: A British Genocide in Tasmania', JOURNAL OF BRITISH STUDIES, 54 1045-1046 (2015)
DOI 10.1017/jbr.2015.156
2015 Ryan L, 'Van Diemen's Land: An Aboriginal History', AUSTRALIAN HISTORICAL STUDIES, 46 478-479 (2015)
DOI 10.1080/1031461X.2015.1078932
2015 Ryan L, Hopkins-Weise J, 'Memorializing Britain's imperial wars in New Zealand in the 1840s: The 99th regiment memorial in Hobart, Tasmania', New Zealand Journal of History, 49 160-175 (2015)
Citations Scopus - 2Web of Science - 2
2014 Ryan L, 'The Cambridge History of Australia', AUSTRALIAN HISTORICAL STUDIES, 45 452-454 (2014)
DOI 10.1080/1031461X.2014.946550
2014 Ryan L, 'Grease and Ochre: The Blending of Two Cultures on the Colonial Frontier', JOURNAL OF AUSTRALIAN STUDIES, 38 132-134 (2014) [C3]
2014 Ryan L, 'Roving Mariners Australian Aboriginal Whalers and Sealers in the Southern Oceans, 1790-1870', JOURNAL OF AUSTRALIAN STUDIES, 38 132-134 (2014) [C3]
2013 Ryan L, 'Edna Ryan and Leadership: The Womens Trade Union Commission, 1976', LABOUR HISTORY, 119-130 (2013) [C1]
Citations Scopus - 1Web of Science - 1
2013 Ryan L, 'Untangling Aboriginal resistance and the settler punitive expedition: the Hawkesbury River frontier in New South Wales, 1794 1810', Journal of Genocide Research, 15 219-232 (2013)

The Australian frontier wars have only recently emerged as an accepted part of the history of Australia. But there is still a reluctance to accept that settler massacre was widesp... [more]

The Australian frontier wars have only recently emerged as an accepted part of the history of Australia. But there is still a reluctance to accept that settler massacre was widespread across the frontier and that it made deep inroads into the Aboriginal population. This article reviews the debate about settler massacre in relation to Aboriginal resistance and finds that the punitive expedition is most likely a euphemism for massacre. It then establishes a new framework, which combines both aspects of frontier violence to explore a variety of published sources about Australia's first frontier at the Hawkesbury River in New South Wales 1794¿1810. The article finds that as an agricultural frontier where the settlers' produce was vital to the colony's survival, the British deployed large numbers of troops to disperse the Bediagal Aborigines from the region, when they resisted the invasion of the agricultural settlers. It cites numerous examples of the punitive expedition and how it operated to force a rapid Aboriginal population decline and concludes that the dynamic of resistance and massacre was a defining feature of the Australian frontier.

DOI 10.1080/14623528.2013.789206
Citations Scopus - 7
2013 Ryan L, 'Edna Ryan and Leadership: The Womens Trade Union Commission, 1976', Labour History, 119-130 (2013)

At the end of 1975 my mother, Edna Ryan, along with a small group of trade union women, received funds from the National Advisory Committee of International Womens Year, to establ... [more]

At the end of 1975 my mother, Edna Ryan, along with a small group of trade union women, received funds from the National Advisory Committee of International Womens Year, to establish a Womens Trade Union Commission (WTUC). Edna had developed the idea for the commission while conducting research for her book, Gentle Invaders, published earlier that year. She believed that the WTUC could be a first step towards resolving the long stand-off between feminists and the labour movement. This article draws on Edna¿s dairies and papers to explore and unravel her contradictory leadership role in the WTUC over its 12 months of life in 1976. She was neither a paid official nor an active trade unionist in the WTUC. Rather, as an active member of the management committee, she relied on her previous experiences as a trade union activist and her membership of the Labor Party and the Womens Electoral Lobby (WEL), to drive the WTUC to become a change agent for trade union women. By the end of 1976, the WTUC had engineered a major shift in trade union attitudes towards women that would have far reaching benefits over the following decade. The article finds that, while Edna did indeed have important skills, she was by no means a one-woman band. She was a catalyst. She seized the opportunities created by second wave feminism to press for change for women trade unionists.

DOI 10.3828/labourhistory.104.0119
2013 Ryan L, 'The Black Line in Van Diemen's Land: Success or failure?', Journal of Australian Studies, 37 3-18 (2013) [C1]

The Black Line in Tasmania in 1830 was the largest force ever assembled against Aborigines anywhere in Australia. Tasmanian historians have dismissed the Line as an aberration by ... [more]

The Black Line in Tasmania in 1830 was the largest force ever assembled against Aborigines anywhere in Australia. Tasmanian historians have dismissed the Line as an aberration by Governor George Arthur and a complete fiasco by virtue of the fact that only two Tasmanian Aborigines were recorded captured and two others killed. This article contests this view by locating the Line within British imperial policy at the time, and it makes three important new findings. Far from being an aberration, the Line was a common strategy employed across the British Empire to forcibly remove indigenous peoples from their homelands. Further, there was not just one but three Lines in force over the fifteen-month period of the entire operation, and they played a decisive role in ending the Black War. The article concludes that in making George Arthur the scapegoat, historians have overlooked the Line's significance as an important instrument of British imperial power in the early nineteenth century. © 2013 International Australian Studies Association.

DOI 10.1080/14443058.2012.755744
Citations Scopus - 12Web of Science - 12
2013 Ryan L, 'Introduction: The Black Line in Van Diemen's Land (Tasmania), 1830', Journal of Australian Studies, 37 1-2 (2013) [C3]
DOI 10.1080/14443058.2012.760213
Citations Scopus - 1Web of Science - 2
2013 Dwyer PG, Ryan L, ''Massacre and its Use in the Old and New European Worlds: 1780-1820'', Journal of Genocide Research, 15 111-115 (2013) [C1]
DOI 10.1080/14623528.2013.789179
Citations Scopus - 5
Co-authors Philip Dwyer
2011 Ryan L, 'My Father's Daughter: Memories of an Australian Childhood', Labour History, 216-217 (2011) [C3]
2011 Ryan L, 'William (Bill) Louis Thorpe (11 August 1943-16 November 2009) OBITUARY', JOURNAL OF AUSTRALIAN STUDIES, 35 113-115 (2011) [C3]
DOI 10.1080/14443058.2011.542604
2010 Ryan L, 'Rewriting Aboriginal History', History Australia, 7 70.1-70.2 (2010)
DOI 10.2104/ha100070
2010 Ryan L, 'Settler massacres on the Port Phillip frontier, 1836-1851', Journal of Australian Studies, 34 257-273 (2010) [C1]
DOI 10.1080/14443058.2010.498091
Citations Scopus - 27Web of Science - 26
2009 Ryan L, 'The long shadow of remembrance: Remembering the debate about massacre in the Black War in Tasmania', Coolabah, 3 51-59 (2009) [C2]
2009 Ryan L, 'Outcasts in White Tasmania', Mankind, 8 249-254
DOI 10.1111/j.1835-9310.1972.tb00445.x
2009 Ryan L, 'Ever Manning: Selected Letters of Manning Clark, 1938-1991', OVERLAND, 84-86 (2009)
2009 Ryan L, ''The axe had never sounded': Place, people and heritage of Recherche Bay, Tasmania', Australian Archaeology, - 74-76 (2009) [C3]
2008 Ryan L, 'Massacre in the Black War in Tasmania 1823-34: A case study of the Meander River Region, June 1827', Journal of Genocide Research, 10 479-499 (2008) [C1]
DOI 10.1080/14623520802447834
Citations Scopus - 10
2008 Ryan L, 'List of multiple killings of Aborigines in Tasmania: 1804-1835', Online Encyclopaedia of Mass Violence, 1-8 (2008) [C2]
2008 Ryan L, ''Van Diemen's land'', OVERLAND, 83-84 (2008)
2008 Ryan L, 'Aborigines and Activism: Race, Aborigines and the Coming of the Sixties to Australia', OVERLAND, 91-92 (2008)
2008 Ryan L, 'Spinning the Dream: Assimilation in Australia 1950-1970', OVERLAND, 91-92 (2008)
2008 Ryan L, 'Heartsick for Country: Stories of Love, Spirit and Creation', OVERLAND, 91-92 (2008)
2008 Ryan L, 'Rediscovering Recherche Bay', HISTORICAL RECORDS OF AUSTRALIAN SCIENCE, 19 104-108 (2008)
2008 Ryan L, ''The axe had never sounded': Place, people and heritage of Recherche Bay, Tasmania', HISTORICAL RECORDS OF AUSTRALIAN SCIENCE, 19 104-108 (2008)
2008 Ryan L, 'Race, nation, history: A conference in honour of Henry Reynolds, Canberra, 29-30 August 2008', Labour History, 95 247-249 (2008) [C3]
Citations Scopus - 1
2008 Ryan L, 'Forged by War (Book Review)', Overland, 191 83-84 (2008) [C3]
2008 Ryan L, 'Assimilating Australia', Overland, 193 91-92 (2008) [C3]
2008 Ryan L, 'Irynej Skira (1950-2005): A scientific life', Papers and Proceedings of the Royal Society of Tasmania, 142 1-12 (2008) [C1]
2008 Ryan L, 'Rediscovering Recherche Bay and The axe had never sounded: Place, people and heritage of Recherche Bay, Tasmania', Historical Records of Australian Science, 19 104-108 (2008) [C3]
2007 Ryan L, 'Genocide and settler society: Frontier violence and stolen indigenous children in Australian history', Holocaust and Genocide Studies, 21 158-161 (2007) [C3]
DOI 10.1093/hgs/dcm020
2007 Ryan L, 'A history of Queensland', OVERLAND, 89-91 (2007)
2007 Ryan L, 'A history of New South Wales', OVERLAND, 89-91 (2007)
2007 Ryan L, 'In quite a state', Overland, 189 89-91 (2007) [C3]
2006 Ryan L, 'The French explorers and the aboriginal Australians 1772-1839 (Book review)', Australian Historical Studies, 37 228-229 (2006) [C3]
2006 Ryan L, 'Massacre in Tasmania? How can we know?', Australian & New Zealand Law & History E-Journal, 2006 1-21 (2006) [C1]
2006 Ryan L, 'Shopping Malls Country: Reading the Central Coast of NSW', Journal of Australian Studies, 153-160 (2006) [C1]
DOI 10.1080/14443050509388041
Citations Scopus - 3
2005 Ryan L, 'Betty Vivian Pybus (1923-2004) - Obituary', Australian Feminist Studies, 20 165-167 (2005) [C3]
Citations Web of Science - 1
2004 Ryan L, 'Mother and Daughter Feminists, 1969-1973. Or Why Didn't Edna Ryan Join Women's Liberation?', Australian Feminist Studies, 19 75-85 (2004) [C1]
DOI 10.1080/0816464042000197440
Citations Scopus - 5Web of Science - 3
2004 Ryan L, 'Risdon Cove and the massacre of 3 May 1804: Their place in Tasmanian history', Tasmanian Historical Studies, 9 107-123 (2004) [C1]
2003 Ryan L, 'Reflections by a target of a media witch hunt', History Australia, 1 105-109 (2003) [C2]
Citations Scopus - 3
2003 Ryan L, 'The Right Book for the Right Time?', Labour History, 85 202-206 (2003) [C1]
2003 Ryan L, 'Review of Marilyn Lake's biography of Faith Bandler, Faith Bandler, Gentle Activist', Australian Humanities Review, May 2003 4 (2003) [C3]
2002 Ryan L, 'Explorations in Australian Feminist Biography: Notes towards a Biography of my Mother, Edna Ryan (1904-1997)', School of Humanities: Working Papers, Vol 1, 1 117-135 (2002) [C1]
2001 Ryan L, 'Aboriginal History Wars', Australian Historical Association Bulletin, 92 31-37 (2001) [C3]
2001 Ryan L, 'Barbara Curthoys - Obituary', AUSTRALIAN FEMINIST STUDIES, 16 9-11 (2001)
DOI 10.1080/08164640120038872
2001 Ryan L, 'A Turning Point for the Weekly and a Turning Point for Women? Debate about Women and University in Australian Women's Weekly in 1961', Journal of Interdisciplinary Gender Studies, 2 52-65 (2001) [C1]
1998 Ryan L, 'Reconceptualising Convict Women', Australian Feminist Studies, 13 143-144 (1998)
DOI 10.1080/08164649.1998.9994899
1998 Ripper M, Ryan L, 'The Role of the 'Withdrawal Method' in the Control of Abortion', Australian Feminist Studies, 13 313-322 (1998) [C3]
Citations Scopus - 2
1996 Ryan L, 'Origins of a royal commission', Journal of Australian Studies, 20 1-12 (1996)
DOI 10.1080/14443059609387262
Citations Scopus - 7
1994 Ryan L, 'Suffrage And Beyond: New Zealand Women'S Suffrage Centenary Conference Victoria University, Wellington 27 29 August 1993.', Australian Feminist Studies, 9 179-184 (1994)
DOI 10.1080/08164649.1994.9994732
1993 Ryan L, Ripper M, 'Women, Abortion and the State', Journal of Australian Studies, 17 72-87 (1993)
DOI 10.1080/14443059309387142
Citations Scopus - 5
1992 Baird B, Ryan L, Sheridan S, 'The Australian Women's Weekly 1946-1971: A Textual and Historical Analysis', Australian Feminist Studies, 7 95-96 (1992)
DOI 10.1080/08164649.1992.9994647
1987 Ryan L, 'Woman and Home in Australia', Australian Feminist Studies, 2 177-187 (1987)
DOI 10.1080/08164649.1987.9961550
1986 Ryan L, 'Aboriginal Women and Agency in the Process of Conquest: A Review of Some Recent Work', Australian Feminist Studies, 1 35-43 (1986)
DOI 10.1080/08164650.1986.10382921
Citations Scopus - 9
1980 Ryan J, Ryan L, McQueen H, 'The Black Swan of Trespass. The Emergence of Modernist Painting in Australia to 1944', Labour History, 109-109 (1980)
DOI 10.2307/27508411
1980 Ryan L, Markus A, 'Fear and Hatred: Purifying Australia and California 1850-1901', Labour History, 121-121 (1980)
DOI 10.2307/27508451
1978 Ryan L, Macknight CC, 'The Voyage to Marege'', Labour History, 104-104 (1978)
DOI 10.2307/27508315
1975 Reed J, Oakes K, Auchmuty R, Castle J, Bryson L, Ryan L, et al., 'Sources on Women', Labour History, 146-147 (1975)
DOI 10.3828/27508203
1974 Ryan L, 'Rejoinder', Politics, 9 217-217 (1974)
DOI 10.1080/00323267408401476
1973 Ryan L, 'Recent works on aborigines', Politics, 8 384-386 (1973)
DOI 10.1080/00323267308401418
1968 Ryan L, Cannon M, 'The Land Boomers', Labour History, 68-68 (1968)
DOI 10.2307/27507898
Show 69 more journal articles

Review (2 outputs)

Year Citation Altmetrics Link
2002 Ryan L, 'New Perspectives on the Frontier Wars', Australian Book Review (2002) [D1]
1978 Ryan L, 'REVIEWS', Oceania (1978)

The Tasmanian Aborigines. By N. J. B. Plomley. A short account of them and some aspects of their life. Published by the author in association with the Adult Education Division, Ta... [more]

The Tasmanian Aborigines. By N. J. B. Plomley. A short account of them and some aspects of their life. Published by the author in association with the Adult Education Division, Tasmania. Launceston, 1977. viii + 72 pp. Copies available at $2.50 from the author, P.O. Box 1276 Launceston, Tasmania. 7250. © 1978 The University of Sydney

DOI 10.1002/j.1834-4461.1978.tb01377.x
Co-authors Nicholas Talley

Conference (5 outputs)

Year Citation Altmetrics Link
2020 Arthur PL, Champion E, Craig H, Gu N, Harvey M, Haskins V, et al., 'Time-layered cultural map of Australia', CEUR Workshop Proceedings (2020) [E1]

This paper reports on an Australian project that is developing an online system to deliver researcher-driven national-scale infrastructure for the humanities, focused on mapping, ... [more]

This paper reports on an Australian project that is developing an online system to deliver researcher-driven national-scale infrastructure for the humanities, focused on mapping, time series, and data integration. Australian scholars and scholars of Australia worldwide are well served with digital resources and tools to deepen the understanding of Australia and its historical and cultural heritage. There are, however, significant barriers to use. The Time Layered Cultural Map of Australia (TLCMap) will provide an umbrella infrastructure related to time and space, helping to activate and draw together existing high-quality resources. TLCMap expands the use of Australian cultural and historical data for research through sharply defined and powerful discovery mechanisms. See https://tlcmap.newcastle.edu.au/.

Citations Scopus - 1
Co-authors Victoria Haskins, Bill Pascoe, Mark Harvey, Hugh Craig
2008 Ryan L, 'Race, Nation, History: A Conference in Honour of Henry Reynolds, Canberra, 29-30 August 2008', Labour History (2008)
DOI 10.3828/27516321
2001 Ryan L, 'Edna Ryan's Struggles for Equal Pay in the 1960s', Work Organisation Struggle, ANU, Canberra (2001) [E1]
2001 Ryan L, 'Too Close for Clarity? The Dilemma of a daughter biographer'', Proceedings from Interdisciplinary Gender Studies Conference, University of Newcastle, Ourimbah (2001) [E2]
2001 Ryan L, 'Sydney Women's Liberation Movement 1969-1972', Social Movements in Australia 1965-1975., University of Sydney (2001) [E2]
Show 2 more conferences

Other (1 outputs)

Year Citation Altmetrics Link
2017 Ryan Lyndall, Debenham Jennifer, Pascoe William, Brown Mark, 'Colonial Frontier Massacres in Eastern Australia 1788-1872', (2017)
Co-authors Bill Pascoe, Jennifer Debenham
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Grants and Funding

Summary

Number of grants 25
Total funding $2,604,851

Click on a grant title below to expand the full details for that specific grant.


20232 grants / $492,543

Time Layered Cultural Map of Australia: Advanced Techniques and Big Data$472,543

Funding body: ARC (Australian Research Council)

Funding body ARC (Australian Research Council)
Project Team Emeritus Professor Hugh Craig, Prof Paul Arthur, Professor Catharine Coleborne, Prof Penny Edmonds, Emeritus Professor Lyndall Ryan, Prof Ning Gu, Professor Bill Palmer, Paul Arthur, Prof Ros Smith, Professor Penny Edmonds, Prof Hamish Maxwell-Stewart, Professor Rosalind Smith, Andrew May, Professor Hamish Maxwell-Stewart, Prof Martin Gibbs, Dr Julie Nichols, Dr Tully Barnett, Dr Julieanne Lamond, Professor Tully Barnett, Professor Julieanne Lamond, Professor Julie Nichols
Scheme Linkage Infrastructure Equipment & Facilities (LIEF)
Role Investigator
Funding Start 2023
Funding Finish 2023
GNo G2200565
Type Of Funding Scheme excluded from IGS
Category EXCL
UON Y

'Time Layered Cultural Map of Australia: Advanced Techniques and Big Data' - College cash contribution$20,000

Funding body: College of Human and Social Futures | University of Newcastle

Funding body College of Human and Social Futures | University of Newcastle
Project Team

E/Prof Hugh Craig (lead), Prof Paul Arthur, Prof Penny Edmonds, Prof Ning Gu, Prof Rosalind Smith, Prof Andrew May, Prof Hamish Maxwell-Stewart, Prof Martin Gibbs, Prof Catharine Coleborne, E/Prof Lyndall Ryan, A/Prof Bill Palmer, Dr Julie Nichols, Dr Tully Barnett, and Dr Julieanne Lamond

Scheme CHSF
Role Investigator
Funding Start 2023
Funding Finish 2023
GNo
Type Of Funding Internal
Category INTE
UON N

20212 grants / $35,000

Massacre Map Flagship Project$20,000

Funding body: Faculty of Education and Arts, University of Newcastle

Funding body Faculty of Education and Arts, University of Newcastle
Project Team

Professor Catharine Coleborne (Lead); Professor Lyndally Ryan; Emeritus Professor Hugh Craig; and Dr Julie McIntyre.

Scheme Faculty funding
Role Investigator
Funding Start 2021
Funding Finish 2021
GNo
Type Of Funding Internal
Category INTE
UON N

Australian Research Data Commons (ARDC) Faculty Cash Contribution$15,000

Funding body: Faculty of Education and Arts, University of Newcastle

Funding body Faculty of Education and Arts, University of Newcastle
Project Team

Emeritus Professor Hugh Craig (Lead); Professor Lyndall Ryan; and Associate Professor Bill Palmer.

Scheme RFP 2020
Role Investigator
Funding Start 2021
Funding Finish 2021
GNo
Type Of Funding Internal
Category INTE
UON N

20202 grants / $60,000

Faculty support for Digital Humanities, Time Layered Cultural Map and Colonial Frontiers Massacre Map$40,000

Funding body: Faculty of Education and Arts, University of Newcastle

Funding body Faculty of Education and Arts, University of Newcastle
Project Team

E/Professor Hugh Craig; Professor Lyndall Ryan

Scheme Faculty funding
Role Lead
Funding Start 2020
Funding Finish 2020
GNo
Type Of Funding Internal
Category INTE
UON N

Faculty funding for external engagement in 2020 - Centre for 21st Century Humanities$20,000

Funding body: Faculty of Education and Arts, University of Newcastle

Funding body Faculty of Education and Arts, University of Newcastle
Project Team

Dr J McIntyre (Director); Dr K Ariotti; A/Prof G Arrighi; Dr H Askland; Dr J Coffey; A/Prof N Cushing; E/Prof H Craig; Prof L Ryan et al

Scheme Faculty funding
Role Investigator
Funding Start 2020
Funding Finish 2020
GNo
Type Of Funding Internal
Category INTE
UON N

20196 grants / $613,963

Time-layered cultural map of Australia$416,963

Funding body: ARC (Australian Research Council)

Funding body ARC (Australian Research Council)
Project Team Emeritus Professor Hugh Craig, Deb Verhoeven, Paul Arthur, Andrew May, Professor Rosalind Smith, Prof Ning Gu, Erik Champion, Associate Professor Mark Harvey, Professor Victoria Haskins, Emeritus Professor Lyndall Ryan
Scheme Linkage Infrastructure Equipment & Facilities (LIEF)
Role Investigator
Funding Start 2019
Funding Finish 2022
GNo G1800235
Type Of Funding Scheme excluded from IGS
Category EXCL
UON Y

Faculty matching funding for UON PRC Scheme 2019 - Centre for 21st Century Humanities$100,000

Funding body: Faculty of Education and Arts, University of Newcastle

Funding body Faculty of Education and Arts, University of Newcastle
Project Team

Dr G Arrighi; Dr H Askland; Prof H Craig; Prof P Dwyer; A/Prof J Gulddal; A/Prof M Harvey; Prof V Haskins (Director); Prof M Johnson; A/Prof B Palmer; A/Prof T Pender; Prof L Ryan.

Scheme Faculty funding
Role Investigator
Funding Start 2019
Funding Finish 2019
GNo
Type Of Funding Internal
Category INTE
UON N

Faculty support for the completion of data for the Colonial Frontiers Massacre Map$37,000

Funding body: Faculty of Education and Arts, University of Newcastle

Funding body Faculty of Education and Arts, University of Newcastle
Project Team

Professor Lyndall Ryan

Scheme Faculty funding
Role Lead
Funding Start 2019
Funding Finish 2019
GNo
Type Of Funding Internal
Category INTE
UON N

Time-layered cultural map of Australia$30,000

Funding body: Edith Cowan University

Funding body Edith Cowan University
Project Team Emeritus Professor Hugh Craig, Deb Verhoeven, Paul Arthur, Andrew May, Professor Rosalind Smith, Prof Ning Gu, Erik Champion, Associate Professor Mark Harvey, Professor Victoria Haskins, Emeritus Professor Lyndall Ryan
Scheme Linkage Infrastructure Equipment & Facilities (LIEF) Partner Funding
Role Investigator
Funding Start 2019
Funding Finish 2019
GNo G1901231
Type Of Funding Scheme excluded from IGS
Category EXCL
UON Y

Faculty ARC LIEF Support$20,000

Funding body: Faculty of Education and Arts, University of Newcastle

Funding body Faculty of Education and Arts, University of Newcastle
Project Team

Professor Hugh Craig; Professor Deb Vendoeven; Professor Paul Arthur; Professor Andrew May; Professor Rosalind Smith; Professor Ning Gu; Professor Erik Champion; Associate Professor Mark Harvey; Professor Victoria Haskins; Professor Lyndall Ryan.

Scheme Faculty funding
Role Investigator
Funding Start 2019
Funding Finish 2019
GNo
Type Of Funding Internal
Category INTE
UON N

Time-layered cultural map of Australia$10,000

Funding body: University of Alberta

Funding body University of Alberta
Project Team Emeritus Professor Hugh Craig, Deb Verhoeven, Paul Arthur, Andrew May, Professor Rosalind Smith, Prof Ning Gu, Erik Champion, Associate Professor Mark Harvey, Professor Victoria Haskins, Emeritus Professor Lyndall Ryan, Emeritus Professor Lyndall Ryan
Scheme Linkage Infrastructure Equipment & Facilities (LIEF) Partner Funding
Role Investigator
Funding Start 2019
Funding Finish 2019
GNo G1901233
Type Of Funding Scheme excluded from IGS
Category EXCL
UON Y

20181 grants / $100,000

Faculty matching funding for UON PRC Scheme - Centre for 21st Century Humanities$100,000

Funding body: Faculty of Education and Arts, University of Newcastle

Funding body Faculty of Education and Arts, University of Newcastle
Project Team

Dr G Arrighi; Dr H Askland; Prof H Craig (Director); Prof P Dwyer; A/Prof J Gulddal; A/Prof M Harvey; Prof V Haskins; Prof M Johnson; Dr B Palmer; A/Prof T Pender; Prof L Ryan; Prof R Smith (Deputy Director).

Scheme Faculty funding
Role Investigator
Funding Start 2018
Funding Finish 2018
GNo
Type Of Funding Internal
Category INTE
UON N

20172 grants / $16,325

Blood and Ochre: Interpreting East Kimberley Aboriginal Art as Evidence of Massacre$9,915

Funding body: University of Newcastle

Funding body University of Newcastle
Project Team Professor Victoria Haskins, Emeritus Professor Lyndall Ryan, Emeritus Professor John Boulton
Scheme Linkage Pilot Research Grant
Role Investigator
Funding Start 2017
Funding Finish 2017
GNo G1701116
Type Of Funding Internal
Category INTE
UON Y

Colonial Frontier Massacres: Digital Map Donations Button$6,410

Funding body: Crowdfunding

Funding body Crowdfunding
Project Team Emeritus Professor Lyndall Ryan
Scheme Research Project
Role Lead
Funding Start 2017
Funding Finish 2020
GNo G1701340
Type Of Funding C3300 – Aust Philanthropy
Category 3300
UON Y

20161 grants / $200,000

Faculty matching funding for UON PRC Scheme 2016/17 - Centre for 21st century Humanities$200,000

Funding body: University of Newcastle - Faculty of Education and Arts

Funding body University of Newcastle - Faculty of Education and Arts
Project Team

Prof Hugh Craig; Prof Lisa Adkins; A/Prof Ros Smith; Prof Roland Boer; Prof Philip Dwyer; Dr Bill Palmer; A/Prof Mark Harvey; Prof Victoria Haskins; Prof Lyndall Ryan; Dr Trisha Pender.

Scheme Faculty funding
Role Investigator
Funding Start 2016
Funding Finish 2017
GNo
Type Of Funding Internal
Category INTE
UON N

20152 grants / $524,214

Intimacy and Violence in Anglo Pacific Rim settler colonial societies$522,214

Funding body: ARC (Australian Research Council)

Funding body ARC (Australian Research Council)
Project Team Emeritus Professor Lyndall Ryan, Professor Amanda Nettelbeck, Associate Professor Anna Johnston, Associate Professor Penelope Edmonds, Professor Victoria Haskins, Dr Angela Wanhalla, Wanhalla, Angela, Nettelbeck, Amanda, Johnston, Anna, Edmonds, Penelope, Dr Angela Wanhalla
Scheme Discovery Projects
Role Lead
Funding Start 2015
Funding Finish 2023
GNo G1400095
Type Of Funding C1200 - Aust Competitive - ARC
Category 1200
UON Y

International Congress of the Historical Sciences (CISH), CHINA, 24-29 August$2,000

Funding body: University of Newcastle - Faculty of Education and Arts

Funding body University of Newcastle - Faculty of Education and Arts
Project Team Emeritus Professor Lyndall Ryan
Scheme Travel Grant
Role Lead
Funding Start 2015
Funding Finish 2015
GNo G1500886
Type Of Funding Internal
Category INTE
UON Y

20141 grants / $301,297

Violence on the Australian Colonial Frontier, 1788-1960. $301,297

Funding body: ARC (Australian Research Council)

Funding body ARC (Australian Research Council)
Project Team Emeritus Professor Lyndall Ryan
Scheme Discovery Projects
Role Lead
Funding Start 2014
Funding Finish 2016
GNo G1300143
Type Of Funding C1200 - Aust Competitive - ARC
Category 1200
UON Y

20131 grants / $9,120

A history of Australia's live animal export trade$9,120

Funding body: University of Newcastle

Funding body University of Newcastle
Project Team Professor Philip Dwyer, Emeritus Professor Lyndall Ryan, Doctor Bidda Jones
Scheme Linkage Pilot Research Grant
Role Investigator
Funding Start 2013
Funding Finish 2013
GNo G1301097
Type Of Funding Internal
Category INTE
UON Y

20111 grants / $240,000

Massacre and Colonization, 1780-1820$240,000

Funding body: ARC (Australian Research Council)

Funding body ARC (Australian Research Council)
Project Team Professor Philip Dwyer, Emeritus Professor Lyndall Ryan, Dr Barbara Mann, Associate Professor Nigel Penn
Scheme Discovery Projects
Role Investigator
Funding Start 2011
Funding Finish 2013
GNo G1000022
Type Of Funding Aust Competitive - Commonwealth
Category 1CS
UON Y

20042 grants / $7,400

Mother and daughter feminists 1958-1985: A daughter's memoir of Edna Ryan$5,000

Funding body: University of Newcastle

Funding body University of Newcastle
Project Team Emeritus Professor Lyndall Ryan
Scheme Project Grant
Role Lead
Funding Start 2004
Funding Finish 2004
GNo G0183449
Type Of Funding Internal
Category INTE
UON Y

British Australian Studies Association, 2-5 September 2004, UK$2,400

Funding body: University of Newcastle

Funding body University of Newcastle
Project Team Emeritus Professor Lyndall Ryan
Scheme Travel Grant
Role Lead
Funding Start 2004
Funding Finish 2004
GNo G0184426
Type Of Funding Internal
Category INTE
UON Y

20021 grants / $2,737

The Pasts and Futures of Australian Studies, from 11 October 2002 to 12 October 2002$2,737

Funding body: University of Newcastle

Funding body University of Newcastle
Project Team Emeritus Professor Lyndall Ryan
Scheme Conference Establishment Grant
Role Lead
Funding Start 2002
Funding Finish 2002
GNo G0182576
Type Of Funding Internal
Category INTE
UON Y

20001 grants / $2,252

British Australian Studies Association.$2,252

Funding body: University of Newcastle

Funding body University of Newcastle
Project Team Emeritus Professor Lyndall Ryan
Scheme Travel Grant
Role Lead
Funding Start 2000
Funding Finish 2000
GNo G0180241
Type Of Funding Internal
Category INTE
UON Y
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Research Supervision

Number of supervisions

Completed10
Current0

Past Supervision

Year Level of Study Research Title Program Supervisor Type
2022 PhD A History of the Aboriginal People of the Central Coast of New South Wales to 1874 PhD (History), College of Human and Social Futures, The University of Newcastle Principal Supervisor
2022 PhD The Kidnapping of Aboriginal People in Colonial Queensland 1859-1897: Labour, Violence and Government Inaction PhD (History), College of Human and Social Futures, The University of Newcastle Co-Supervisor
2013 PhD Representations of Aborigines in Australian Documentary Film 1901 - 2009 PhD (Humanities), College of Human and Social Futures, The University of Newcastle Sole Supervisor
2008 PhD Value to Vermin: The Donkey in Australia PhD (History), College of Human and Social Futures, The University of Newcastle Co-Supervisor
2006 PhD The Impact of Detention on Iraqi Artists in Australia and the Use of Art Practice as a Method of Healing PhD (Fine Art), College of Human and Social Futures, The University of Newcastle Co-Supervisor
2005 PhD Testimonio: Witnessing my Mother's Life: Race and Identity in Twentieth Century Australia PhD (Humanities), College of Human and Social Futures, The University of Newcastle Principal Supervisor
2004 PhD Being Hula: The appropriation of Christianity in Irupara village, Papua New Guinea PhD (Humanities), College of Human and Social Futures, The University of Newcastle Sole Supervisor
2003 PhD Desire for Social Justice: Equal Pay, the International Labour Organisation, and Australian Government Policy, 1919-1975 PhD (History), College of Human and Social Futures, The University of Newcastle Co-Supervisor
2003 Masters A Knowledge of Body - Feminist Transformative Action Re-search on Body Image Dissatisfaction in Women Using Narrative Therapy Techniques M Social Sc (Humanities) [R], College of Human and Social Futures, The University of Newcastle Principal Supervisor
2002 PhD Emerging Literacy in New South Wales Rural and Urban Indigenous Families PhD (Humanities), College of Human and Social Futures, The University of Newcastle Co-Supervisor
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News

portrait of Professor Lyndall Ryan in her home studying a book

News • 16 Mar 2022

New evidence reveals Aboriginal massacres committed on extensive scale

The narrative of Australia’s early colonial history continues to be contested with further evidence released today of the violent frontier massacres of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people.

Professor Lyndall Ryan

News • 19 Mar 2020

Massacre Map Presentations to Canberra Audiences

Professor Lyndall Ryan, the leader of the team behind the Colonial Frontier Massacres Map has recently delivered several presentations in Canberra.

Professor Lyndall Ryan with the Colonial Frontier Massacre Map

News • 29 Nov 2019

University part of winning Walkley Award for coverage of Indigenous Affairs

The Killing Times, a collaboration between The Guardian Australia and the University of Newcastle’s Colonial Frontier Massacres research team has been awarded the 2019 Walkley Award for Coverage of Indigenous Affairs.

Professor Lyndall Ryan with the map of Australia showing the colonial massacres

News • 18 Nov 2019

True extent of colonial frontier massacres revealed as new sites added to interactive map

The true extent of massacres on the colonial frontier of Australia has been revealed by researchers at the University of Newcastle. Around 97 per cent of people killed in these massacres were Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people.

Killing times

News • 6 Sep 2019

Massacre map and Guardian Australia partnership project wins NSW Premier's History Award

The Killing Times awarded for its contribution to history and public debate.

News • 15 Apr 2019

Centre for 21st Century Humanities leads development of ground breaking software platform

The University of Newcastle’s Centre for 21st Century Humanities (C21CH) is leading the development of a powerful software platform called the ‘Time-Layered Cultural Map of Australia’ (TLCMap).

News • 27 Nov 2018

Prestigious recognition for local historian

Recognised for her outstanding contribution to the humanities in Australia, Professor Lyndall Ryan has been elected to the Australian Academy of Humanities, which is the highest honour of achievement in this field.

Mark Brown and Bill Pascoe

News • 17 Sep 2018

Massacres map wins best digital map 2018

The Colonial Frontiers Massacres Map has won the best digital map award at the 2018 New Zealand Cartographic Society GeoCart Conference.

Prof Lyndall Ryan

News • 27 Jul 2018

Massacres on Australia’s colonial frontier climb to 250

The number of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander massacres verified and recorded on an online digital map has risen to 240, following an influx of valuable information and evidence from regional communities around Australia.

News • 6 Oct 2017

Mentor program supports Early Career Researchers

The Centre for 21st Century Humanities has kicked off a program to nurture early career researchers (ECR’s). Five ECRs have been selected to participate in the program that will see them mentored by senior academics and up-skilled in the growing area of digital humanities.

News • 1 Aug 2017

Bringing the Humanities into the digital age

The recent launch of the Colonial Frontier Massacres Map, an online tool which maps the Aboriginal massacres that occurred across colonial Australia, saw a huge influx of visitors to the Centre for 21st Century Humanities (C21CH) website to view the map.

Lyndal Ryan

News • 5 Jul 2017

Mapping the massacres of Australia’s colonial frontier

More than 150 Aboriginal massacres that occurred during the spread of pastoral settlement in Australia are now documented in an online digital map, created by University of Newcastle researchers.

ARC funding

News • 5 Nov 2014

UON secures $11m ARC funding

The University of Newcastle (UON) was today awarded almost $11 million in competitive research funding by the Australian Research Council (ARC) in its 2015 Major Grants announcement.

ARC Discovery Projects 2015

News • 5 Nov 2014

ARC Discovery Projects 2015

The Faculty of Education and Arts at the University of Newcastle has secured six Australian Research Council (ARC) Discovery Program grants for 2015.

The Conversation

News • 6 Aug 2014

Noted works: The Black War

By Lyndall Ryan, School of Humanities and Social Science, University of Newcastle

Nicholas Clements, The Black War: Fear, Sex and Resistance in Tasmania (2014, University of Queensland Press).

Research Directions 2013/2014

News • 16 May 2014

Research Directions 2013/2014

The new edition of Research Directions from the Faculty of Education and Arts is now available.

Rockefeller Foundation acknowledges history of violence research

News • 29 Apr 2014

UON history of violence research acknowledged

The Director of the Centre for the History of Violence at the University of Newcastle, Professor Philip Dwyer, has been awarded an Academic Writers Residency by The Rockefeller Foundation to conclude work on  "The Dark Side of Empire: Violence and Colonialism in the Old and New Worlds, c1780-1820."

Lyndall Ryan

News • 8 Nov 2013

Lyndall Ryan Awarded ARC Discovery Projects

Prof Lyndall Ryan and Dr Jonathan Richards have been awarded an ARC Discovery Project 2013-2016, $289,000.00. Violence on the Australian Colonial Frontier, 1788-1960

Emeritus Professor Lyndall Ryan

Position

Emeritus Professor
Centre for the History of Violence
School of Humanities, Creative Ind and Social Sci
College of Human and Social Futures

Focus area

History

Contact Details

Email lyndall.ryan@newcastle.edu.au
Phone (02) 49216692

Office

Room MCLG34A
Building McMullin
Location Callaghan
University Drive
Callaghan, NSW 2308
Australia
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