By Jon Fraenkel,
Stewart Firth and Bryant Allen
State, Society
& Governance in Melanesia program
Australian
National University
Professor
Hank Nelson of the Australian National University died in Canberra on Friday 17th
February after a long battle with cancer.
His
was a life focussed on both Papua New Guinea and Australia, and it was the
relationship between the two that nourished his intellect.
His
books, including Black, White and Gold:
Goldmining in Papua New Guinea, 1878-1930 and Taim Bilong Masta: the Australian involvement with Papua New Guinea,
established for him a reputation as the foremost historian of Papua New Guinea.
His
work on Australian involvement in the Pacific War and the impact of that war on
the peoples of Papua New Guinea drew upon and refined his skills in oral
history, as with the 1982 documentary Angels
of War, which won awards both from the Australian Film Institute and at the
Nyon Film Festival in Switzerland.
That
work led to his involvement in the preparation of displays and sound archives
of the Australian War Memorial.
Hank Nelson wanted history to serve a broader purpose,
and he wrote not just for his colleagues or his profession but for a wider
public.
His three books published by the ABC and the
associated radio series exemplified this approach, above all Taim Bilong Masta: The Australian Involvement with
Papua New Guinea, ABC, 1982, which told the story in large part
through people’s reminiscences.
Hank
(Hyland Neil) Nelson was born on October 21st 1937 in Boort, country Victoria.
His
parents, Hyland and Hilda, were farmers and his brother John and two younger
generations still work the same farm.
Hank was educated at Boort Higher Elementary
School, Kerang High School and then the University of Melbourne.
He
first became a school teacher at Numurkah and then Rosanna High Schools before
being appointed as a lecturer at the Royal Melbourne Institute of Technology in
1964.
Then commenced what was to prove a life-long
association with Papua New Guinea.
Hank
was appointed to the Administrative College in Port Moresby in 1966, and in
1968 moved to the new University of Papua New Guinea.
That university had still to be built, and
when he arrived he taught students in the preliminary year in sheds at the
showground with his characteristic blend of straightforwardness, imagination
and high expectations.
His
students in the late 1960s were to become Papua New Guinea’s first governing
elite.
One of them was Charles Lepani, now PNG High
Commissioner to Australia.
Hank
was appointed to The Australian National University (ANU) in 1973. He once
joked that Australians were such a rarity in the ranks of historians at ANU
that his position had to be due to affirmative action.
That
was typical humility.
Nothing
could be further from the truth.
He was a splendid historian, equally at home
with the detail of Papua New Guinea’s history and with theories of political
power or the dynamics of group identity.
He was proud of his rural origins and drew upon
them in With Its Hat About Its Ears: Recollections of the Bush School.
And his interest
in the experiences of those at war inspired his book Prisoners of War:
Australians Under Nippon.
His
background was the foundation of his research, and it helps to explain his
concern for the place of the common people in history.
He
was a firm empiricist, but one who happily engaged with global themes, such as
Francis Fukuyama’s perspectives on state-building or Paul Collier’s analysis of
the causes of poverty amongst the ‘bottom billion’.
In
recent years, as Chair of the ANU’s State, Society & Governance in
Melanesia Program, he was always on the lookout for seemingly small incidents that
gave a window through which to look at wider trends, and that would reveal
something about how political power worked in Melanesia – letters
to the newspapers, for example, which he used as a way of understanding the
frustrations and hopes of ordinary Papua New Guineans in a country where government
has delivered much less than promised at independence.
He
had no time for sloppy or badly-conceived work but was the first to praise
first-rate work, generous to colleagues in a profession where generosity is
often missing.
For that reason he served as a solid mentor
for younger scholars at ANU, and an inspiration to fellow senior colleagues.
A
lively strain of common decency also made Hank a much-liked colleague and
friend.
Hank
became a Fellow of the Academy of Social Sciences and a Member of the Order of
Australia.
He
kept writing until close to the end, with a series of articles for Inside Story about the crises of the
Somare government in PNG, a paper on ‘Comfort women’ in wartime Rabaul, and
another on the perils of labelling states as having ‘failed’ in the Pacific.
He was a firm advocate of straight talking and
solid prose, with no fluff around the edges.
He was possessed with a great sense of the
urgency of scholarly research in Melanesia, and of how much still needed to be
done.
It
is a tribute to Professor Nelson that he contributed so much of what has been
done.
He
is survived by his wife Janet, his children Tanya, Lauren and Michael and his
grandchildren Rachel, Jack and Eliza.
R.I.P:-)
ReplyDeleteA wonderful australian, capable and ready to share his immense knowledge of Papua New Guinea and the area with rare generosity, passion and talent.
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