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Russel Ward
‘resourcefulness, camaraderie and anti-authoritarianism provided the basis for Australia’s distinctive national ethos’
Ann Beggs-Sunter
‘legitimate source of power’
Ann Beggs-Sunter
‘Australia’s largest civil armed rebellion’
Ann Beggs-Sunter
‘our identity as a multi-cultural land of migrants needs to be reassessed’
Ann Beggs-Sunter
‘anti-Chinese sentiment increased at Ballarat after Eureka’
Frederick Coster
‘it is the People that have the right to the land’
Ann Curthoys
‘power and racial knowledge are truly intertwined’
Ann Curthoys
‘our treatment of these Chinese men shames many of us’
Ann Curthoys
‘only when the Chinese were seen as a declining force’
Conrad Gershevitch
‘Contemporary Australia '[is a] paradox’
Conrad Gershevitch
‘a disguised yet deliberate attempt to curtail the racially undesirable other’
Andrew Messner
‘genesis of later institutionalised racism’
Maddock and McLean
‘international movement of labour’
Paul Pickering
‘A platform for a future based on prosperity and democracy’
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’
David Neal
‘The law distinguished bond from free’
David Neal
‘convicts did not suffer such extreme oppression as the slaves’
David Neal
‘The convict worker was not just a worker who happened to be a convict as they claim’
Arthur Brittan
‘why do we find it impossible to give credence to those who testify from the front-line of suffering?’
John Hirst
‘Slave societies do not have such quiet endings’
John Hirst
‘Perpetual bondage from generation to generation’
John Hirst
‘no parallel to the ideology’
John Hirst
‘government planned a colony not a jail’
John Hirst
Curtin identified as British
John Hirst
‘How could I say both and mean both?’
John Hirst
‘fine-line between sentiment and self-interest’
John Hirst
‘substance of independence’
Hamish Maxwell-Stewart
John Longfellow was ‘a curious choice for a position of trust’
Hamish Maxwell-Stewart
‘Opportunities for some prisoners’
Babbette Smith
‘National loss of memroy’
Babbette Smith
‘unspoken agreement…ignorance’
Babette Smith
‘Burden of history’
Stuart Macintyre
‘taken, settled, possessed’
Stuart Macintyre
‘Strategic dependence on Britain’
Stuart Macintyre
‘resourceful and willing’
Stuart Macintyre
Bean ‘codifi[ed] the legend’
Stuart Macintyre
‘Was it Australia’s war?’
Stuart Macintyre
‘hatred of Japanese brutality was kept after the war in memoirs and ficiton’
Stuart Macintyre
‘Accepted this sacrifice’
Stuart Macintyre
‘people’s war’
Stuart Macintyre
‘romantic in expectation’
Stuart Macintyre
WAP was a ‘growing embarrassment to the government’
Stuart Macintyre
‘three inept Prime Ministers’ after Menzies
Stuart Macintyre
‘nationalist and anti-Semitic’
Stuart Macintyre
‘Equality of sacrifice’
Stuart Macintyre
‘radical right and left-wing ideologies were short-lived’
Robson
‘one-fifth of NSW’s was described as bond’
Raymond Evans and Bill Thorpe
the experience of ‘unfreedom’ is overlooked
Tim Causer
‘civilly dead’ with criminal status
H. McQueen
‘they rebelled in that way because they could do no other’
H. McQueen
‘richest history of mutiny’
Eric Andrews
‘a decidedly unfriendly attitude’
Eric Andrews
‘comfort-driven and aloof’
Eric Andrews
‘Heroes to criminals’
Eric Andrews
‘Class and status mattered’
D.A. Kent
‘Anzac’ is ‘one of the most powerful and influential myths in national consciousness’
D.A. Kent
‘Tough and could endure, with a grumble, almost anything that fate might sling at him’
D.A. Kent
‘commemorative souvenir’
D.A. Kent
‘No place to mention the fear that gripped most men at Gallipoli’
D.A. Kent
‘an exuberant longing for Australian beer’
Mark McKenna
‘little to celebrate’
Mark McKenna
‘Like all national myths, Anzac simplifies the past. We see them how we need to see them’
Mark McKenna
Anzac Day was ‘simply about being Australian’
Mark McKenna
'Could be fused through the loss of sacrificial blood’
Alistair Thomson
‘Preconceptions’
Alistair Thomson
‘negative images were explained away as inevitable consequences’
Alistair Thomson
‘Manhood and duty’
John Howard, 2003
‘Australians are not by nature a warlike people. There is no tradition of conquest or imperial ambition’
Kapferer and Morris
‘Dismissed as a relic of empire, masculinist and militarist’
Marilyn Lake and Henry Reynolds
‘Australia was fighting someone else’s war’
Marilyn Lake and Henry Reynolds
C.E.W. Bean ‘render[ed] the experiences of ordinary soldiers central to the history of WWI’
Marilyn Lake
‘there could be no return to the old order at the end of the war’
Marilyn Lake
‘havoc’
Marilyn Lake
‘reconceptualisation of femininity’
Marilyn Lake
‘female desire was put on the political agenda’
Marilyn Lake
‘War is a gendering activity’
Marilyn Lake
‘structure of femininity’
Marilyn Lake
‘the end of the war saw the re-assertion of the traditional role of femininity’
Joan Beaumont
‘Did Britain betray Australia'?’
Joan Beaumont
‘Australia lacked options’
Joan Beaumont
‘Unpalatable though it may be for some nationalists, Australia had to rely on a major ally’
Raymond Evans
‘suffocating grip of conventional Australian mateship’
Raymond Evans
‘teenager’ became a clearer ‘social and economic category’
Raymond Evans
‘Stylistic specularity’
Raymond Evans
‘Masculinism - the dominant, accepted public mode of being many’
Raymond Evans
‘tension…between sensitivity and agressiveness’
Gerster and Bassett
‘decade in which freaks went public’
Gerster and Bassett
‘the more eccentric the individual, the better’
Gerster and Bassett
‘protest became a pose’
Gerster and Bassett
‘rebellion was a childish insubordination’
Gerster and Bassett
‘Myths assumed lives of their own uninhibited by historical and sociological fact’
Francis de la Rochefoucald
‘Youth is a perpetual intoxication, fever of the mind’
Jon Stratton
‘consumption-based cultural category’
Jon Stratton
adolescence was the ‘male time of visual disruption’
Jon Stratton
‘America was given the blame for the behaviour of working class kids’
Janet McCalman
‘Anger and alienation’
Janet McCalman
‘feminine community in the street. Men in the pubs’
Janet McCalman
‘fear of being seen as a whinger’
Janet McCalman
‘the depression story is a mass of contradictions’
Janet McCalman
‘tolerate the intolerable’