Film • The 2008 film
The Last Confession of Alexander Pearce tells the true story of
Alexander Pearce through his final confession to fellow Irishman and colonial priest Philip Conolly. The film was nominated for a Rose d'Or, an
Irish Film and Television Award, an
Australian Film Institute Award and won an
IF Award in 2009. • The 2009 film ''
Van Diemen's Land'' follows the story of the infamous Irish convict Alexander Pearce and his escape with seven other convicts. • The 2011 Australian drama film
The Hunter, about a shadowy corporation that sends a mercenary to
Tasmania to track down a
thylacine, a supposedly extinct animal whose genetic code holds the secret to a dangerous weapon. • The 2013 ABC telemovie
The Outlaw Michael Howe is set in Van Diemen's Land and tells the story of bushranger
Michael Howe's convict-led rebellion. • The 2018 film ''
Black '47'' directed by
Lance Daly and set in Ireland during the
Great Irish Famine depicts a judgement imposed on a farmer for theft by a judge in the province of
Connemara, which includes six months of hard labour and subsequent penal transportation to Van Diemen's Land. • The 2018 film
The Nightingale is set in Van Diemen's Land in 1825 and depicts a female Irish convict taking revenge for the murder of her family by the
colonial forces of Australia as the
Black War breaks out.
Music •
U2 recorded the song "Van Diemen's Land" for their 1988 album
Rattle and Hum, with lyrics expressing the plight of a man facing transportation. • In the traditional
Irish folk song "
The Black Velvet Band", the protagonist is found guilty of stealing a watch and is sent to Van Diemen's Land as punishment. • The song "Van Diemen's Land" in the album titled "Parcel of Rogues" with vocals by
Barbara Dickson is about an Irish man caught for poaching and transported to Van Diemen's Land and the hardships he has living there. • Russell Morris released an album titled "
Van Diemen's Land" in Australia in 2014. The title track describes the voyage of a convict being transported to Van Diemen's Land and was released with a video shot in Tasmania. • The
Roud Folk Song Index includes two different English
transportation ballads with the title
Van Diemen's Land, both about a poacher sentenced to transportation to the penal colony. • The album "Fred Holstein: A Collection" includes
Fred Holstein's version of the classic folk song "Maggie May" (
Maggie May (folk song), which is different from Rod Stewart's
Maggie May). In his version, the prostitute and thief Maggie May is transported to "Van Diemen's cruel shore". •
Ewan McColl recorded the transportation song "Van Diemen's Land", releasing it on the Riverside Records long-playing album "Scots Streets Songs", and also released the song as a 45-rpm single.
Literature 's poem "If you were coming in the fall" makes a reference to Van Diemen's land. •
Emily Dickinson's 1890 poem, "If you were coming in the fall" makes reference to Van Diemen's land with the line "Subtracting, til my fingers dropped, Into Van Dieman's Land.". • The novel,
The Broad Arrow: Being Passages from the History of Maida Gwynnham, a Lifer (published in 1859 in London and in 1860 in Hobart) was written in the penal colony, under the pen name
Oliné Keese. • Australian winner of the Nobel Prize for Literature
Patrick White's novel
A Fringe of Leaves places much of the novel's beginnings in Van Diemen's Land. • Van Diemen's Land is the setting of
Richard Flanagan's novels ''
Gould's Book of Fish: A Novel in Twelve Fish (2002) and Wanting'' (2008). •
Brendan Whiting's book
Victims of Tyranny, gives an account of the lives of the Irish rebels, the Fitzgerald convict brothers who were sent to help open up the north of Van Diemen's Land in 1805, under the leadership of the explorer
Colonel William Paterson. • In
Cormac McCarthy's novel
Blood Meridian, one of the characters in the
Glanton Gang of scalpers in 1850s
Mexico is a "Vandiemenlander" named Bathcat. Born in
Wales he later went to Australia to hunt aborigines, and eventually came to Mexico, where he uses those skills on the
Apaches. • From
The Potato Factory by
Bryce Courtenay (1995), "... subtracting till my fingers dropped; into Van Diemen's Land." This is a quote from Emily Dickinson's Poem "If You Were Coming in the Fall". Two of the main characters in Cortenay's novel are transported Van Diemen's Land as convicts and another travels there, where around half of the novel takes place. • In the novel
The Convicts by
Iain Lawrence, young Tom Tin is sent to Van Diemen's Land on charges of murder. • In the novel
The Terror by
Dan Simmons (2007). In this novel about the ill-fated exploration by and to discover the
Northwest Passage. The ships left England in May 1846 and were never heard from again, although since then much has been discovered about the fate of the 129 officers and crew. References are made to Van Diemen's Land during the chapters devoted to
Francis Crozier. • Van Diemen's Land is the setting of the novel
English Passengers by
Matthew Kneale (2000), which tells the story of three eccentric Englishmen who in 1857 set sail for the island in search of the Garden of Eden. The story runs parallel with the narrative of a young Tasmanian who tells the struggle of the indigenous population and the desperate battle against the invading British colonists. •
Christopher Koch's novel
Out of Ireland (1999) describes life as a convict in Van Diemen's Land. • Marcus Clarke used historical events as the basis for his fictional
For the Term of his Natural Life (1870), the story of a gentleman, falsely convicted of murder, who is transported to Van Diemen's Land. •
The Diemenois (2015), a graphic novel by Tasmanian author,
J. W. Clennett, is set in an alternate Van Diemen's Land, where a figure rumoured to be
Napoleon Bonaparte fakes his death and flees to "Terre de Diemen Ouest", a fictional French colony in north-west Van Diemen's Land. The story unfolds entirely in the imagined settlement of Le Ville de Baudin, named after the French explorer
Nicolas Baudin. •
Julian Stockwin's
nautical fiction series,
The Kydd Series, includes the book
Command (2006) in which Thomas Kydd takes a ship to Van Diemen's Land, at the behest of then governor of New South Wales,
Philip Gidley King, for the purpose of preventing French explorers from establishing a French settlement on the island. • "The Exiles" by
Christina Baker Kline (2020) tells the story of "transportation" to Van Dieman's Land and the hardship, oppression, opportunity and hope of three women at the centre of the story. == See also ==