Aus historiography

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127 Terms

1
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Russel Ward

‘resourcefulness, camaraderie and anti-authoritarianism provided the basis for Australia’s distinctive national ethos’

2
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Ann Beggs-Sunter

‘legitimate source of power’

3
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Ann Beggs-Sunter

‘Australia’s largest civil armed rebellion’

4
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Ann Beggs-Sunter

‘our identity as a multi-cultural land of migrants needs to be reassessed’

5
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Ann Beggs-Sunter

‘anti-Chinese sentiment increased at Ballarat after Eureka’

6
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Frederick Coster

‘it is the People that have the right to the land’

7
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Ann Curthoys

‘power and racial knowledge are truly intertwined’

8
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Ann Curthoys

‘our treatment of these Chinese men shames many of us’

9
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Ann Curthoys

‘only when the Chinese were seen as a declining force’

10
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Conrad Gershevitch

‘Contemporary Australia '[is a] paradox’

11
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Conrad Gershevitch

‘a disguised yet deliberate attempt to curtail the racially undesirable other’

12
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Andrew Messner

‘genesis of later institutionalised racism’

13
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Maddock and McLean

‘international movement of labour’

14
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Paul Pickering

‘A platform for a future based on prosperity and democracy’

15
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David Neal

‘They did not live in a free society. They lived in a society whose conditions of existence were centred on punishment, a penal colony’

16
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David Neal

‘The law distinguished bond from free’

17
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David Neal

‘convicts did not suffer such extreme oppression as the slaves’

18
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David Neal

‘The convict worker was not just a worker who happened to be a convict as they claim’

19
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Arthur Brittan

‘why do we find it impossible to give credence to those who testify from the front-line of suffering?’

20
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John Hirst

‘Slave societies do not have such quiet endings’

21
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John Hirst

‘Perpetual bondage from generation to generation’

22
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John Hirst

‘no parallel to the ideology’

23
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John Hirst

‘government planned a colony not a jail’

24
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John Hirst

Curtin identified as British

25
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John Hirst

‘How could I say both and mean both?’

26
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John Hirst

‘fine-line between sentiment and self-interest’

27
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John Hirst

‘substance of independence’

28
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Hamish Maxwell-Stewart

John Longfellow was ‘a curious choice for a position of trust’

29
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Hamish Maxwell-Stewart

‘Opportunities for some prisoners’

30
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Babbette Smith

‘National loss of memroy’

31
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Babbette Smith

‘unspoken agreement…ignorance’

32
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Babette Smith

‘Burden of history’

33
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Stuart Macintyre

‘taken, settled, possessed’

34
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Stuart Macintyre

‘Strategic dependence on Britain’

35
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Stuart Macintyre

‘resourceful and willing’

36
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Stuart Macintyre

Bean ‘codifi[ed] the legend’

37
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Stuart Macintyre

‘Was it Australia’s war?’

38
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Stuart Macintyre

‘hatred of Japanese brutality was kept after the war in memoirs and ficiton’

39
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Stuart Macintyre

‘Accepted this sacrifice’

40
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Stuart Macintyre

‘people’s war’

41
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Stuart Macintyre

‘romantic in expectation’

42
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Stuart Macintyre

WAP was a ‘growing embarrassment to the government’

43
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Stuart Macintyre

‘three inept Prime Ministers’ after Menzies

44
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Stuart Macintyre

‘nationalist and anti-Semitic’

45
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Stuart Macintyre

‘Equality of sacrifice’

46
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Stuart Macintyre

‘radical right and left-wing ideologies were short-lived’

47
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Robson

‘one-fifth of NSW’s was described as bond’

48
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Raymond Evans and Bill Thorpe

the experience of ‘unfreedom’ is overlooked

49
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Tim Causer

‘civilly dead’ with criminal status

50
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H. McQueen

‘they rebelled in that way because they could do no other’

51
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H. McQueen

‘richest history of mutiny’

52
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Eric Andrews

‘a decidedly unfriendly attitude’

53
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Eric Andrews

‘comfort-driven and aloof’

54
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Eric Andrews

‘Heroes to criminals’

55
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Eric Andrews

‘Class and status mattered’

56
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D.A. Kent

‘Anzac’ is ‘one of the most powerful and influential myths in national consciousness’

57
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D.A. Kent

‘Tough and could endure, with a grumble, almost anything that fate might sling at him’

58
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D.A. Kent

‘commemorative souvenir’

59
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D.A. Kent

‘No place to mention the fear that gripped most men at Gallipoli’

60
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D.A. Kent

‘an exuberant longing for Australian beer’

61
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Mark McKenna

‘little to celebrate’

62
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Mark McKenna

‘Like all national myths, Anzac simplifies the past. We see them how we need to see them’

63
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Mark McKenna

Anzac Day was ‘simply about being Australian’

64
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Mark McKenna

'Could be fused through the loss of sacrificial blood’

65
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Alistair Thomson

‘Preconceptions’

66
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Alistair Thomson

‘negative images were explained away as inevitable consequences’

67
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Alistair Thomson

‘Manhood and duty’

68
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John Howard, 2003

‘Australians are not by nature a warlike people. There is no tradition of conquest or imperial ambition’

69
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Kapferer and Morris

‘Dismissed as a relic of empire, masculinist and militarist’

70
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Marilyn Lake and Henry Reynolds

‘Australia was fighting someone else’s war’

71
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Marilyn Lake and Henry Reynolds

C.E.W. Bean ‘render[ed] the experiences of ordinary soldiers central to the history of WWI’

72
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Marilyn Lake

‘there could be no return to the old order at the end of the war’

73
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Marilyn Lake

‘havoc’

74
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Marilyn Lake

‘reconceptualisation of femininity’

75
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Marilyn Lake

‘female desire was put on the political agenda’

76
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Marilyn Lake

‘War is a gendering activity’

77
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Marilyn Lake

‘structure of femininity’

78
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Marilyn Lake

‘the end of the war saw the re-assertion of the traditional role of femininity’

79
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Joan Beaumont

‘Did Britain betray Australia'?’

80
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Joan Beaumont

‘Australia lacked options’

81
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Joan Beaumont

‘Unpalatable though it may be for some nationalists, Australia had to rely on a major ally’

82
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Raymond Evans

‘suffocating grip of conventional Australian mateship’

83
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Raymond Evans

‘teenager’ became a clearer ‘social and economic category’

84
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Raymond Evans

‘Stylistic specularity’

85
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Raymond Evans

‘Masculinism - the dominant, accepted public mode of being many’

86
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Raymond Evans

‘tension…between sensitivity and agressiveness’

87
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Gerster and Bassett

‘decade in which freaks went public’

88
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Gerster and Bassett

‘the more eccentric the individual, the better’

89
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Gerster and Bassett

‘protest became a pose’

90
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Gerster and Bassett

‘rebellion was a childish insubordination’

91
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Gerster and Bassett

‘Myths assumed lives of their own uninhibited by historical and sociological fact’

92
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Francis de la Rochefoucald

‘Youth is a perpetual intoxication, fever of the mind’

93
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Jon Stratton

‘consumption-based cultural category’

94
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Jon Stratton

adolescence was the ‘male time of visual disruption’

95
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Jon Stratton

‘America was given the blame for the behaviour of working class kids’

96
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Janet McCalman

‘Anger and alienation’

97
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Janet McCalman

‘feminine community in the street. Men in the pubs’

98
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Janet McCalman

‘fear of being seen as a whinger’

99
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Janet McCalman

‘the depression story is a mass of contradictions’

100
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Janet McCalman

‘tolerate the intolerable’