Australasian and Pacific history Books
Haus Publishing William Hughes: Australia
Book SynopsisThe First World War marked the emergence of the Dominions on the world stage as independent nations, none more so than Australia. The country's sacrifice at Gallipoli in 1915, and the splendid combat record of Australian troops on the Western Front not only created a national awakening at home, but also put Great Britain in their debt, ensuring them greater influence at the Peace Conferences. Australia was represented at Versailles by the Prime Minister, the colourful Billy Hughes, whom Woodrow Wilson called a pestiferous varmint' after their repeated clashes over Australia's claims to the Pacific Islands its troops had taken from Germany during the War. Hughes was also the most vociferous (though by no means at all the only) opponent of the racial equality clause put forward by Japan. Indeed, it was fear of Japanese expansion that drove Australia's territorial demands in the Pacific.Trade ReviewWe know much about the principal players at the Paris peace conferences of 1919-23: US President Woodrow Wilson, French Prime Minister Georges Clemenceau and Britain's Prime Minister David Lloyd George. Each has his own volume in the "Makers of the Modern World" series on the peace conferences and their aftermath. These twin volumes examine the contributions by two small players: the prime ministers of Australia and New Zealand, William Morris (Billy) Hughes and William Ferguson (Bill) Massey, whose countries' wartime sacrifices for the British Empire secured them seats around the conference table. The Paris Peace Conference in 1919 represented a landmark for both in that it was one of the first occasions when the then British Dominions had separate representatives at an international conference beyond the confines of the Empire. Significantly for their national histories, Hughes and Massey appended their separate signatures at Versailles for their own Dominions. Though H-Diplo might regard these as twin volumes in the series, and that is how I propose to review them, these titles are not written as such but as separate, potted histories of the "personalities, events and circumstances" relating to the "makers" - the countries and their leaders - implicated in making peace after the Great War. The volumes follow the same broad structure - the life and the land; the Paris peace conference; and the legacy - because that presumably is the template set by the publisher to examine the standpoint of different countries' leaders around the table. As reviewers of other volumes in this series have noted, it would have helped to have a general editor's introduction to each book on the peace conferences that explained the relationship between each volume and the series. I am not the first reviewer to be confused by the book covers, which in this case suggest they contain biographies of Hughes and Massey, when the volumes are hybrids of biography and abridged segments of national narrative, placed in a suitably imperial context. That said, it is timely to reappraise both Hughes' and Massey's careers. Hughes is better known than Massey because Australia's wartime leader was vituperative and a propagandist, who benefited in Britain from a high media profile crafted by the first generation of the Murdoch press. The mercurial Hughes at least earned biographies, if they now appear dated in this era of transnational scholarship, and Carl Bridge's volume is a useful update of Laurie Fitzhardinge's classic life of the "Little Digger".1 Bridge argues the Paris Peace Conference in 1919 was Hughes' "finest hour" (p. ix), since the concessions he won made him Australia's most important twentieth-century politician and a foremost imperial figure. While this claim may be overstated, it is worth making in order to invite debate. Massey, by contrast, awaits a full biography. Though James Watson depicts him as a warm character, New Zealand historians have not found him sufficiently endearing to publish a full account of his life, so this volume fills a gap in the historiography. New Zealand had two representatives at the Paris conference, the other being Sir Joseph Ward, who was one of an extra ten delegates representing the British Empire. As Watson explains, Massey was the delegate who spoke for New Zealand. He argues that Massey has not received his due from historians of the peace conferences and seeks to revise understanding of the New Zealand Prime Minister's contribution, especially where he diverged from Hughes. Notably, Massey supported a compromise over the Japanese demand for a racial equality clause in the Covenant of the League of Nations. Watson's volume exposes divergences in Australia's and New Zealand's circumstances: Massey arrived late at the 1919 peace conference, delayed by the Spanish influenza epidemic, which struck earlier in New Zealand than in Australia. Reading these volumes in parallel also exposes divergent personal and geopolitical approaches: while Hughes and Massey were both accustomed to dealing in, and with, a British world, and unaccustomed to American and French diplomacy, Hughes' approach was more pugilistic. Massey owed his separate voice at the table to Hughes and to Robert Borden of Canada. Who the intended audience for these volumes is puzzled me when perusing the biographical sections. We learn that both Hughes and Massey were migrants - Hughes was a Welshman from London, Massey an Ulster Scot from County Londonderry - with different politics, as leader of the Australian Labor Party and New Zealand's non-labour Reform Party respectively. Bridge portrays Hughes in Keith Hancock's terms as an "independent Australian Briton": a nation-builder in a British imperial context, an advocate of compulsory military training and a citizen army and an independent Australian navy equipped to defend Australia's coast. Deeply suspicious of Japan despite the Anglo-Japanese Alliance, Hughes was an outspoken advocate of the White Australia policy, for whom World War I was a life or death struggle. Massey equally favoured a White New Zealand policy, though Watson does not describe it as such, noting instead that the Immigration Restriction Act 1920 reinforced New Zealand's policy of racial exclusion. This was more covert than the White Australia policy, but a direct parallel in practice. Bridge's national history begins with Australian federation in 1901 and Watson's with New Zealand's late discovery by Europe and late colonisation. Bridge's approach is more successful because the historical context he provides is more specifically related to these volumes' core subject: how these British Dominions responded to the Paris peace treaties. Reading the two volumes in parallel offers a particular advantage in this respect, by providing an accessible means of understanding the contrasting national stories over conscription in the Great War: New Zealand introduced conscription, like Britain, Canada, Newfoundland and the United States, whereas Australia did not, like South Africa and Ireland. Both Hughes and Massey supported the British model of conscription. But Hughes, unlike Massey, could not introduce conscription by Act of Parliament because the Australian federal system was against him. Australia said "no" to conscription twice, in referenda in 1916 and 1917. The result split the Labor Party because Hughes walked out taking 25 MPs with him. Hughes formed a new coalition party, the Nationalists, who won the federal election in 1917. Consequently, the Australians remained a volunteer force in World War 1 while at home Hughes became a divisive figure. New Zealand, on the other hand, legislated for conscription in 1916, while the conscription issue helped create, as opposed to split, the New Zealand Labour Party. When we compare Bridge's and Watson's accounts of "dividing the spoils" (to use Bridge's term for the treaty negotiations) we learn that both Hughes and Massey sought mandates over the German colonies to their north: Australia over New Guinea and New Zealand over Western Samoa. Massey shared Hughes' aim to exclude Germans from the Pacific and shared suspicions of Japan, though Hughes was blunter. According to Bridge, Hughes made his mark debating what would become of the former German colonies in the Pacific, and famously clashed with Wilson over the mandate (annexation) issue. Australia and New Zealand gained the substance of what they wanted, that is, to be rid of the German empire in the Pacific especially where that intruded south of the equator into what the southern Dominions regarded as their neighbourhood. Bridge shows how Hughes was uncompromising in opposing the racial equality clause that Japan sought to have included in the League of Nations covenant. Both volumes could have made more of the comparative context whereby these white settler states around the Pacific Rim perceived the Japanese proposal as a threat to their restrictive immigration policies; for Massey also opposed the idea, as did Canada and the western United States. On the issue of reparations, Hughes was equally truculent: "'Germany must pay'" (Bridge, p. 88). Massey sought a tougher peace as well, but this view failed to secure British and American support. What Australia and New Zealand did gain was the tiny former German island of Nauru and, with it, access to a century's supply of phosphate for agricultural fertiliser. In the aftermath of the peace conference, Britain, Australia and New Zealand shared the administration of Nauru's mandate. But Massey clashed with Hughes over Nauru because he wanted the mandate assumed by Britain, not Australia. Massey also wanted the British government to take control of the British graves (including those of New Zealanders) at Gallipoli, which he saw as a sacred site for the British race, especially the Anzacs from Australia and New Zealand. Overall, despite such comparisons and contrasts invited by this joint review, Watson portrays Massey as distrustful of Hughes rather than subservient to Australia's "Little Digger". Both Bridge and Watson demonstrate how Massey and Hughes advanced their separate national interests. Comparing the volumes themselves, Bridge's is the more successful in style and zest, and in locating Hughes within a broader British world. He interprets "the legacy" of Hughes' participation at the conference table largely in biographical terms, arguing that participation made Hughes a leading figure in the British Empire. For Bridge, the legacy is Hughes's as an elder statesman, rather than the legacy of the peace conferences. This exposes an inherent tension: for the series' sub-title suggests the aftermath of the peace conferences will be discussed. Instead we learn that Hughes remained in Australia's federal parliament for another 30 years, but after 1923 he never again served as Prime Minister. Indeed, he lived long enough to experience the war against Japan that he had predicted. Bridge's conclusion is a pithy summing up of Hughes as both a nationalist and an imperialist: "The British Empire literally made him and in so doing he and it did much to make modern Australia." (p. 131) Watson, however, is to be commended for his useful short chapter reflecting on the legacy of Versailles from a New Zealand perspective. He outlines and explains the lack of public awareness about the Paris Peace Conference in New Zealand compared to Anzac Day, the anniversary of the landing by Australian and New Zealand forces at Gallipoli in April 1915; the long-run implications of securing the mandate for Western Samoa; and the boost to New Zealand farming from using Nauru's phosphate as fertiliser. He proceeds to argue that the perception of a "faulty peace" (p. 154) helps to explain the New Zealand first Labour government's conciliatory attitude towards Nazi Germany in the late 1930s. He also outlines the change of attitude that saw New Zealand become a foundation member of the United Nations in 1945. In sum, both authors have tried valiantly to write to a series template that contains inherent problems for the reader because of unresolved tensions between the different genres of biography and concise national histories, and the history of international relations, which remain unaddressed by a general editor. As a result each volume transitions awkwardly between chapters within the specified parts. Nonetheless, individually and comparatively, these works are useful additions to our understanding of the role that the broader empire of settlement played in imposing peace terms at the end of World War I. Each contains useful notes and a chronology. But a rationale is not given for the "culture" timeline in each volume. Are the works included relevant to the biographical subjects' lives? I suspect the answer is no. More signposting is required, as for the series as a whole. 1 L. F. Fitzhardinge. William Morris Hughes: A Political Biography, vol. 2 The Little Digger, 1914-1952. Sydney: Angus & Robertson, 1979. -- Philippa Mein Smith H-Diplo Review 20110722
£27.70
Peter Lang Ltd The Safe House Down Under: Jewish Refugees from
Book SynopsisAfter the demise of Czechoslovakia in March 1939, the Jewish population fell victim to Nazi persecution. Hoping to find a safe haven elsewhere in the world, some Czechoslovak Jews turned to Australia to seek refuge. This book focuses on their struggles to survive in life-threatening situations and their efforts to reach the safety of the distant continent.Although the German occupation of Czechoslovakia has been a subject of extensive academic debate, the role of the Australian government in this international event has thus far not been examined. This book evaluates the impact on Australia of policies pursued by Europe's leading politicians with regard to Czechoslovakia that ultimately failed to prevent the outbreak of the Second World War.Central to the book is a discussion of Australia's policy towards the admission of Jewish refugees from Czechoslovakia. Drawing on archival sources as well as original interviews conducted with former refugees from Czechoslovakia, the author offers insights into the lives and experiences of these Jewish refugees down under. At the same time, the book sheds light on Australia's involvement in one of the defining moments of the twentieth century.
£25.65
RLPG Sydney Cipher and Search
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£11.39
University College Dublin Press Mingling of Swans: A Cork Fenian and Friends
Book SynopsisCasey was one of a group of Fenians arrested in 1865 in Cork and transported to Western Australia with other Fenians captured in the abortive 1867 Rising. "A Mingling of Swans" includes Casey's unpublished account of his experiences as a convict on roadwork parties, as well as correspondence by Casey and other Fenians, and some articles by Casey on his impressions of Western Australia which were published in Dublin separatist newspapers. Casey portrays with humour and determination the harsh conditions endured by Fenian prisoners.Trade Review'The book is very well presented with an excellent introduction and sections on the history of Western Australia; the Catholic Church in Western Australia; the Amnesty Movement; and biographical notes on the key figures ... This work on the incarceration of Fenians provides valuable information which will greatly assist students of the period.' Ian Chambers, Australasian Journal of Irish Studies, 2014 'University College Dublin Press has now published over thirty 'Classics of Irish History'. These contemporary accounts by well known personalities of historical events and attitudes have an immediacy that conventional histories do not have. Introductions by modern historians provide additional historical background and, with hindsight, objectivity.' Books Ireland Nov 2007 'Scholars of nineteenth-century Irish and Irish-American politics should reacquaint themselves with these classics, part of a long running and immensely useful series from University College Dublin Press. Patrick Maume has edited and written the introductions for no less than nine of the books in this series, lending them his breadth of knowledge and keen analysis that have made him one of the most learned and intellectually generous young scholars in the field.' Irish Literary Supplement Fall 2008 'this is a collection of writing by Corkman Casey which might be regarded as a memoir of his time in Australia where he was transported after the failed 1867 rising. The book is in three parts. The first consists of letters he wrote while in Australia; the second reprints a long letter of his which was serialised in the newspaper The Irishman; while the third part is Casey's notebook written between 1867 and 1868. Together they provide a vivid portrait of a convict's life in Australia. Casey returned to Ireland in 1870 after an amnesty. He did not have a high opinion of Australia or of the life that voluntary immigrants could expect there and discouraged Irish people from emigrating - [as] a source on the Fenians and the transportees it is valuable.' Books Ireland November 2010 'Two selections of his writings have been included in the Classics of Irish History series, both edited by Mairead and Patrick Maume and Mary Casey, granddaughter of John Sarsfield Casey. The first The Galtee Boy is a detailed and fascinating account of his trial before the Cork Special Commission. It also gives an insight into the organisation of the Fenians in the cuitry. It concludes with a description of life in English prisons and his struggle there to preserve dignity. In 1867 he was transported to Australia and the second book, A Mingling of Swans, tells us of life on a road gang in a penal settlement. It also includes a selection of his letters home and to other Fenians. Both books are expertly edited and the notes add greatly to the information in them. UCD Press are to be congratulated on this series in general. The standard of editing and presentation are uniformly high. The inclusion of the hitherto unpublished works on the Fenian movement makes available valuable insights which will greatly assist students of the period. One looks forward to more such publications.' Books Ireland, May 2012Table of ContentsIntroduction by Mary Casey, Mairead Maume and Patrick Maume; Note on the Text; A MINGLING OF SWANS: Part I: The Correspondence of John Sarsfield Casey, 1867-71; Part II: From the Irishman, 1870: 1 Emigration to Australia, 1867; 2 The Released Prisoners' Visit to the Australian Colonies, 1869; Part III: Casey's Australian Notebook, 1867-8; APPENDICES: A History of Western Australia; B The Catholic Church in Western Australia; C The Amnesty Movement; D Biographical notes on key figures: 1 Fenians; 2 Others.
£19.00
Sean Kingston Publishing The Shark Warrior of Alewai: A Phenomenology of
Book SynopsisThe first anthropological monograph published on the Vula'a people of south-eastern Papua New Guinea, The Shark Warrior of Alewai considers oral histories and Western historical documents that cover a period of more than 200 years in the light of an ethnography of contemporary Christianity. Van Heekeren's phenomenology of Vula'a storytelling reveals how the life of one man, the Shark Warrior, comes to contain the identity of a people. Drawing on the philosophy of Martin Heidegger, she goes on to establish the essential continuities that underpin the reproduction of Vula'a identity, and to demonstrate how these give a distinctive form to Vula'a responses to historical change. In an approach that brings together the fields of Anthropology, History and Philosophy, the book questions conventional anthropological categories of exchange, gender and kinship, as well as the problematic dichotomization of myth and history, to argue for an anthropology grounded in ontology.
£999.99
Parthian Books Do Miners Read Dickens?: The Origins and Progress
Book SynopsisIn 1983, two University Professors looked slightly bemused as they scanned the shelves of the South Wales Miners' Library. One said to the other, 'Do miners read Dickens?' We seek to answer that question, and a little more besides. This special fortieth anniversary volume chronicles the origins of the Library out of the remnants of the magnificent Workmen's Institute libraries, once described as 'the brains of the Coalfield', and charts its development over time to becoming a unique research and lifelong learning centre.
£36.70
Old Street Publishing The Shortest History of Japan
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£9.49
Sydney University Press The Eureka Stockade
Book SynopsisThe Eureka Stockade is Carboni's eccentric yet shrewd account of the events leading up to and beyond the miners' revolt on the Victorian goldfields in 1854. Raffaello Carboni (1817-1875) was born in Urbino, Italy. He arrived at the Victorian goldfields in 1853 and witnessed the attack on the Eureka Stockade in 1854 as a member of the miners central committee. He eventually returned to Italy to participate in the Risorgimento.
£13.49
Sydney University Press Limits of Location: Creating a Colony
Book SynopsisIn 1826, partly as a means of curbing disorder and brutality in bush living, Governor Darling established the area known as the 'limits of location' within which colonists could see land grants, but beyond which they could not. The line on the map, however, presented no real restraint. The contributors to this book reveal different approaches to creating a colony. Using the rich collections of the Mitchell Library, the authors go beyond the traditional sources of history, highlighting the personal stories revealed through family letters, and creative interaction with the landscape through poetry and drawings. The roles of Aborigines, missionaries, women and migrant workers are explored, and all stories return to the way the newcomers created a sense of place as they settled in this new world. This publication is supported by the NSW Chapter of the Independent Scholars Association of Australia.Table of ContentsList of illustrations Foreword Elizabeth Ellis Why this collection? Acknowledgements Introduction: setting the scene Gretchen Poiner and Sybil Jack Surveyors and the creation of location in New South Wales Sybil Jack Flora in view Helen Hewson Belonging: the meaning of place for women in the early settlement of New South Wales Gretchen Poiner A very benevolent society Marilyn Dodkin Portrait of a family: the lost art of letter writing Audrey Tate and Margaret Bettison Early Indian workers in the Australian colonies Marie de Lepervanche People and place: terms of inclusion in a colony's history Christine Jennett 'Make a light': Aboriginal economic contributions to the emerging nation Gaynor Macdonald Baiami and the Bible: religious encounters in early colonial Australia Ian Keese 'An other world': Albert Tissandier at Jenolan Caves Susan Steggall The ethnomania of R.H. Mathews: anthropology and the rage for collecting Martin Thomas Abbreviations Notes Bibliography Index About the contributors Timeline
£35.24
Sydney University Press Creating White Australia
Book SynopsisThe adoption of White Australia as government policy in 1901 demonstrates that whiteness was crucial to the ways in which the new nation of Australia was constituted. And yet, historians have largely overlooked whiteness in their studies of Australia's racial past. Creating White Australia takes a fresh approach to the question of 'race' in Australian history. It demonstrates that Australia's racial foundations can only be understood by recognising whiteness too as 'race'. Including contributions from some of the leading as well as emerging scholars in Australian history, it breaks new ground by arguing that 'whiteness' was central to the racial ideologies that created the Australian nation.This book pursues the foundations of white Australia across diverse locales. It also situates the development of Australian whiteness within broader imperial and global influences. As the recent apology to the Stolen Generations, the Northern Territory Intervention and controversies over asylum seekers reveal, the legacies of these histories are still very much with us today.Trade Review'Making White Australia provides a complex and thoughtful addition to the study of race and Australian history. The chapters invite readers to revisit and reimagine familiar histories through the lens of whiteness studies.' -- Tikka Wilson * Aboriginal History *Table of ContentsContributors Introduction: creating White Australia – new perspectives on race, whiteness and history Jane Carey and Claire McLiskyPart 1: global framings – Australian whiteness in an international context 1. White, British and European: historicising identity in settler societies Ann Curthoys 2. Reworking the tailings: new gold histories and the cultural landscape Benjamin Mountford and Keir Reeves 3. Trans/national history and disciplinary amnesia: historicising White Australia at two fins de siecles Leigh BoucherPart 2: whiteness on Indigenous missions and reserves 4. Colouring (in) virtue? Evangelicalism, work and whiteness on Maloga Mission Claire McLisky 5. ‘A most lowering thing for a lady’: aspiring to respectable whiteness on Ramahyuck Mission, 1885–1900 Joanna Cruickshank 6. Calculating colour: whiteness, anthropological research and the Cummeragunja Aboriginal Reserve, May and June 1938 Fiona DavisPart 3: writing and performing race – creation and disavowal 7. Theatre or corroboree, what’s in a name? Framing Indigenous Australian 19th-century commercial performance practices Maryrose Casey 8. The wild white man: ‘an event under description’ Maggie Scott 9. Perpetuating White Australia: Aboriginal self-representation, white editing and preferred stereotypes Jennifer JonesPart 4: gender and whiteness 10. A word of evidence: shared tales about infanticide and others-not-us in colonial Victoria Marguerita Stephens 11. White anxieties and the articulation of race: the women’s movement and the making of White Australia, 1910s–1930s Jane Carey 12. Whiteness, maternal feminism and the working mother, 1900–1960 Shurlee Swain, Patricia Grimshaw and Ellen Warne
£20.17
ANU Press The Spanish Lake
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£22.88
Scribe Publications Men of Mont St Quentin
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£15.29
ATF Press St Joseph's Island: Julian Tenison Woods and the
Book SynopsisThere has been little written about Tenison Woods who as a significant figure in Australian Catholic Church life at the time of St Mary Mackillop, Australia''s first Catholic Saint. This is a story about the work of the Sisters of St Joseph, an Australian Catholic Religious Order of women, founded by St Mary Mackillop, in Tasmania. An intriguing story of a group of women who were not part of the Centralised Josephite Sisters under Mary Mackillop, who for a variety of reasons were under the diocesan Catholic Bishop in Tasmania. The book documents their 125 year history from foundation right through to Vatican approval of the being brought under the Federation of Josephite Sisters in Australia.
£26.99
ATF Press Bonhoeffer Down Under
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£26.59
Monash University Publishing Silences and Secrets: The Australian Experience
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£21.59
Monash University Publishing Eilean Giblin: A Feminist between the Wars
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£22.79
Aboriginal Studies Press Overturning aqua nullius: Securing Aboriginal
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£24.29
Aboriginal Studies Press Kangkushot: The Life of Nyamal lawman Peter
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£21.59
Aboriginal Studies Press Melbourne Dreaming: A guide to exploring
Book SynopsisWithin its busy urban presence, Melbourne has a rich and complex Aboriginal heritage. Amongst the city landscape lie layers of a turbulent history and an ongoing vibrant culture. But you need to know where to look. Melbourne Dreaming allows you to take guided tours, or to plan your own self-guided walk, from 30 minutes to a whole day. The first edition of Melbourne Dreaming established itself as an informative and culturally appropriate guidebook. This new edition has been updated with new sites and illustrations. While it''s an authoritative guidebook with clear maps, travelling instructions and stories and images of significant people and events, it''s also an alternative social history, told through precincts of significance to the city''s Aboriginal people. The precincts include both physical and cultural sites. With their accompanying stories and photographs, they evoke an ancient past and a continuing present.
£17.99
University of Adelaide Press Sugar, Steam and Steel: The Industrial Project in
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£18.00
Monash University Publishing Circus and Stage: The Theatrical Adventures of
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£21.59
Monash University Publishing The Hanged Man and the Body Thief: Finding Lives
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£13.29
Monash University Publishing Australian Lives: An Intimate History
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£24.29
Monash University Publishing Respectable Radicals: A history of the National
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£24.29
Monash University Publishing The Vagabond Papers: Expanded Edition
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£21.59
Scribe Publications Tiberius with a Telephone: The life and stories
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£21.25
Monash University Publishing Made in Lancashire: A Collective Biography of
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£21.59
Monash University Publishing Eve Langley and the Pea Pickers
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£999.99
Monash University Publishing Fatal Contact: How Epidemics Nearly Wiped Out
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£21.59
Monash University Publishing Freak Out: How a Musical Revolution Rocked the
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£21.59
Monash University Publishing Leo and Mina Fink: For the Greater Good
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£21.59
Monash University Publishing Freak Out
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£33.20
Monash University Publishing My People’s Songs: How an Indigenous Family
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£21.59
Monash University Publishing Justice in Kelly Country: The Story of the Cop
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£19.79
Monash University Publishing Shadowline: The Dunera Diaries of Uwe Radok
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£21.59
Monash University Publishing Turning Points: 25 Remarkable Australians and the
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£999.99
Monash University Publishing Failed Ambitions: Kew Cottages and Changing Ideas
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£24.29
Monash University Publishing Cruel Care: A History of Children at Our Borders
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£31.99
Monash University Publishing On Red Earth Walking: The Pilbara Aboriginal
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£17.99
Australian Scholarly Publishing The 'Yachties': Australian Volunteers in the
Book SynopsisA saga of exceptional valour in World War II by Australian volunteers in the Royal Navy. Their service was diverse and dangerous, in the Battle of the Atlantic; the Arctic convoys to Murmansk in Russia; mine-clearance, covert sorties, Combined Operations in the Mediterranean and Normandy, and SE Asia. Recruited under the Dominion Yachtsmen Scheme, the Yachties war service in the Northern Hemisphere was as diverse as it was dangerous.
£26.60
ATF Press De-colonising the Biblical Narrative - Volume 3:
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£18.99
ATF Press De-colonising the Biblical Narrative - Volume 3:
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£24.29
Melbourne Books Line of Blood: The Truth of Alfred Howitt
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£24.29
Australian Scholarly Publishing Ron Edwards and the Fight For Australian
Book SynopsisRon Edwards (1930-2008) had a passion for recording and safeguarding for future generations Australia's unique folk heritage. In 1950, at a time when popular wisdom had it that Australia had few folk songs, Edwards and poet John Manifold produced the Bandicoot Ballads, trailblazing broadsheets which marked the beginning of Australia's folk music revival. He also published the first book of Australian folk songs with music. Moving to far North Queensland he made his living painting nudes, horses and bush landscapes. Discovering tradition-bearers all around him he became an irrepressible field collector making Cairns the folk song, yarnspinning and bush craft capital of Australia. He also documented meticulously a wealth of ancient Aboriginal rock art. A passionately independent free spirit and sole proprietor of his Rams Skull Press for over fifty years, Edwards published over three hundred titles, mostly on Australian folklore and traditional craft, the overwhelming majority of which he wrote and illustrated himself. Over forty years on, his pivotal publications The Big Book of Australian Folk Song, The Australian Yarn and Traditional Australian Bush Crafts remain standard references. His monumental twelve volume Index of Australian Folk Song warrants recognition as a national treasure. Ron Edwards is a towering figure in the field of Australian folklore.
£17.00
Monash University Publishing The Good Country: The Djadja Wurrung, the
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£16.19
Monash University Publishing Survival and Sanctuary: Testimonies of the
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£19.79
Monash University Publishing My Father's Shadow: A Memoir
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£19.79
Monash University Publishing Paul and Paula: A Story of Separation, Survival
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£19.79