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Turning points : chapters in South Australian history / edited by Robert Foster and Paul Sendziuk.

EBSCOhost eBook History Collection - North America Available online

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Format:
Book
Contributor:
Foster, Robert, editor.
Sendziuk, Paul, 1974- editor.
Language:
English
Subjects (All):
Aboriginal Australians, Treatment of--South Australia.
Aboriginal Australians, Treatment of.
Aboriginal Australians--South Australia--History.
Aboriginal Australians.
South Australia--History.
South Australia.
South Australia--Social life and customs.
South Australia--Politics and government.
Physical Description:
1 online resource (155 pages) : colour illustrations.
Place of Publication:
Kent Town, South Australia : Wakefield Press, [2012]
Summary:
How distinctive is South Australia after all? South Australia has often been represented as "different": free of convicts, more enlightened in its attitudes toward Aboriginal people, established on rational economic principles, and progressive in its social and political development. Some of this is true, some of it is not, but mostly the story is more complex. In this book, eminent historians explore these themes by examining some key "turning points" in South Australia's history. Henry Reynolds considers the question of Aboriginal rights to land. Bill Gammage illustrates the nature of Aboriginal land management. Paul Sendziuk unravels the myth of the colony's convict-free origins, while Robert Foster and Amanda Nettelbeck reveal a surprisingly strong sense of "nationalism" in colonial South Australia. Susan Magarey traces the histories of two crucial events in the advancement of women. Neal Blewett examines the political innovations of Don Dunstan. Jill Roe looks at life in the country in twentieth-century South Australia, and Mark Peel life in the city, in particular the migrant experience after World War Two. Finally, John Hirst asks: "How distinctive was South Australia after all?"
Contents:
1. Turning points in South Australian history / Robert Foster and Paul Sendziuk
2. The Adelaide District in 1836 / Bill Gammage
3. South Australia: between Van Diemen's Land and New Zealand / Henry Reynolds
4. No convicts here: reconsidering South Australia's foundation myth / Paul Sendziuk
5. Proclamation Day and the rise and fall of South Australian nationalism / Robert Foster and Amanda Nettlebeck
6. Sex and citizenship: from ballot boxes to bedrooms / Susan Magarey
7. Making the most of it: life on the rural frontier in twentieth century South Australia / Jill Roe
8. A place to grow: making a future in postwar South Australia / Mark Peel
9. Don Dunstan and the Social Democratic moment in Australian history / Neal Blewett
10. South Australia and Australia: reflections on their histories / John Hirst.
Notes:
Includes bibliographical references (pages 131-155)
ISBN:
1-74305-175-1
1-74305-174-3

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