(in-person and online)
From early silent films to contemporary television, stories of convicts have become a powerful lens through which Australians have reimagined the nation’s colonial past. This talk looks at striking productions from Australia and abroad, showing how filmmakers used the convict story to prompt bigger questions about nationalism, colonisation, and Aboriginal dispossession. In tracing these shifting representations, it shows how screen culture has both reflected and reshaped public debates about Australian history, identity, and the enduring legacies of colonisation.
In this History Now presentation Dr James Findlay will speak about research from his new book ‘Caught on Screen: Australia’s Convict history in film and television’ and will have a conversation with historian Dr Sophie Loy Wilson (University of Sydney).
This presentation is part of the History Council of New South Wales’s 2025 History Now series presented with support of Create NSW.
The History Council of New South Wales, the Chau Chak Wing Museum, the Vere Gordon Childe Centre at the University of Sydney are pleased to present the 2025 History Now series.
Dr James Findlay is lecturer in the discipline of history where he teaches Australian history and researches historical film and television studies, convict history, Australian popular culture, and public history. He has held the Australian Film Institute Research Collection Fellowship and prior to his appointment was the Archival Project Manager for the Society of Australian Genealogists. Before becoming a historian he worked extensively in film and television production, mostly in the field of documentary, for companies including Beyond Television, Screenworld, and Film Australia.
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The History Council of NSW has been supported by a grant from the NSW Government through Create NSW.
City of Sydney
Macquarie University (Faculty of Arts)
National Archives of Australia
NSW State Archives & Records
Placemaking NSW
Reserve Bank of Australia
State Library of New South Wales
Sydney Living Museums
University of New England
University of Newcastle (School of Humanities & Social Sciences)
University of New South Wales
University of Technology Sydney (Australian Centre for Public History)
History Council of NSW
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Royal Exchange NSW 1225
Phone: 0418 811 522
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