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Inventing Australia: images and identity 1688-1980 / Richard White
White, Richard

The Australian Experience: Issue #3

Inventing Australia: images and identity 1688-1980 / Richard White

images and identity 1688-1980

Allen & Unwin (1981)
9780868610351
| Paperback
205 pages | 140 x 211 mm | Australia | English
$ 14.00 | Value: $ 14.00
Dewey 155.8994 WHI
LC Classification DU105 .W475 1981
LC Control No. 81066528

Subject

  • Australia - History
  • Ethnopsychology - Australia - History
  • National characteristics, Australian - History

Plot

'To be Australian': what can that mean? Inventing Australia sets out to find the answers by tracing the images we have used to describe our land and our people - the convict hell, the workingman's paradise, the Bush legend, the 'typical' Australian from the shearer to the Bondi lifesaver, the land of opportunity, the small rich industrial country, the multicultural society. The book argues that these images, rather than describing an especially Australian reality, grow out of assumptions about nature, race, class, democracy, sex and empire, and are 'invented' to serve the interests of particular groups. There have been many books about Australia's national identity; this is the first to place the discussion within an historical context to explain how Australians' views of themselves change and why these views change in the way they do.