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Everyday artefacts: subsistence and quality of life at the Prisoner Barracks, Port Arthur, Tasmania
Author(s) -
D'Gluyas Caitlin,
Gibbs Martin,
Hamilton Chloe,
Roe David
Publication year - 2015
Publication title -
archaeology in oceania
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 1834-4453
pISSN - 0728-4896
DOI - 10.1002/arco.5072
Subject(s) - convict , subsistence agriculture , recreation , port (circuit theory) , assemblage (archaeology) , archaeology , everyday life , geography , history , agriculture , law , engineering , political science , electrical engineering
This study focuses on the archaeology of the c.1835–1877 Prisoner Barracks constructed at Port Arthur, the domestic quarters for civilian, military and incarcerated occupants spanning almost the entire convict period. Faunal and artefact analyses of the assemblage uncovered at this site were used to provide a more complex understanding of institutional life. The quality of life of the occupants, and how they chose to improve it, is identified through a range of documentary and archaeological sources. It is shown that the barracks complex was a place of domestic life within the confines of an institution. It is evident in the material culture that everyday activities of occupants included the preparation of food, presentation of the home and self, manual tasks such as the production of domestic items, and recreational activities including tobacco smoking and hunting. By assessing indicators of quality of life within an institutional framework, namely the supply of local and imported goods and the material culture of recreation, this work is able to explore potential activities of the occupants that are often hidden from official records. This is examined through a number of scalar units, considering global, local and individual perspectives of the Prisoner Barracks’ landscape.

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