Book Launch - Barron Field in NSW: The Poetics of Terra Nullius, Tom Ford and Justin Clemens

Book cover

Wheeler Centre, 176 Little Lonsdale Street Melbourne Victoria 3000

Barron Field in New South Wales: The Poetics of Terra Nullius by A/Prof Justin Clemens and Dr Thomas H. FordBook Launch – 16 March 

Please join the authors Justin Clemens and Thomas H. Ford for the launch of their important new book on the colonial judge Barron Field — who first made the fateful judgement that established what is now called ‘terra nullius’.

The book will be launched by Marion J. Campbell and Sean O’Beirne at the Wheeler Centre on Thursday 16 March. All are welcome to attend.

Proudly supported by the Enlightenment, Romanticism, and Contemporary Culture Research Unit, and the Critical Research Association Melbourne, both at the University of Melbourne.

Date and time: Thursday, 16 March 2023, 6.00 pm — 8.00 pm
Venue: The Wheeler Centre, 176 Little Lonsdale St, Melbourne

About the book
What does the first poetry in Australia, written by the Judge who declared the land terra nullius, tell us about the singular nature of colonialism here?

On 24 February 1817, Barron Field sailed into Sydney Harbour on the convict transport Lord Melville to a ceremonial thirteen-gun salute. He was there as the new Judge of the Supreme Court of Civil Judicature in New South Wales – the highest legal authority in the turbulent colony. Energetic and gregarious, Fieldimmediately set about impressing his vision of a future Australia as a liberal and prosperous nation. He courted the colony's leading figures, engaged in scientific research and even founded Australia's first bank. He also wrote poetry: in 1819, he published First Fruits of Australian Poetry, the first book of poems ever printed in the country. In England, Field had been the theatre critic for The Times, and a friend of such major Romantic writers as William Wordsworth, Charles Lamb, and Leigh Hunt. In New South Wales, he saw the chance to become a major figure himself, someone who could shape culture and society in enduring ways. Founding Australian poetry was part of that ambition; so too was law. Asked to determine whether Governor Macquarie had authority to impose taxes in the colony, Fieldissued a fateful judgement that established, for the first time, what is now called terra nullius. This book is an extraordinary reconstruction of the circumstances and implications of Field's actions in New South Wales using an original and revealing method: the close reading of his poetry.