Introduction—Contact tracing: The materiality of encounters
Bronwen Douglas and Chris Ballard
1. Mapping the once and future strait: Place, time, and Torres Strait from the sixteenth century to the Pleistocene
Bronwen Douglas
2. Re-presenting encounters: The drawings of Jean Piron
Nicola Dickson
3. ‘With the consent of the tribe’: Marking lands on Tanna and Erromango, New Hebrides
James L. Flexner
4. Marginal history
Chris Ballard
5. Making the visual record of New Guinea: William G. Lawes’s photographic encounters
Antje Lübcke
6. Heads and ‘cultures’: A. C. Haddon, colonial exploration and the ‘Strickland River’ inscription
Ricardo Roque
7. Smoke and mirrors in Arnhem Land: What expeditions tell us about the materiality of crosscultural encounters
Martin Thomas
8. On the banality of paperwork and the brutality of judicial bureaucracy in Myanmar
Nick Cheesman
Biography
Bronwen Douglas is Honorary Professor in the College of Arts & Social Sciences at the Australian National University. Her work combines the ethnohistory of encounters in Oceania with the history of the human sciences and the sciences of place.
Chris Ballard is a Pacific historian at the Australian National University. His work focuses on Indigenous historicities and histories and the supplementary role in these histories of repatriated archives, grounded in collaborative fieldwork with communities in West Papua, Papua New Guinea, and Vanuatu.






