What If?: Australian History as it Might Have Been

Front Cover
Stuart Macintyre, Sean Scalmer
Melbourne University Press, 2006 - History - 293 pages
What if key episodes in Australia's past had turned out differently? If France had colonised part of Australia in the eighteenth century? If the ANZACS had played only a minor role in the Gallipoli landing in World War I? If Gough Whitlam's Labor government had been re-elected after its dismissal in 1975? If Aborigines had been granted citizenship much earlier? What new paths might our national history have followed? In this fascinating volume, leading Australian historians search for answers. Together, they reimagine Australia's environment, race relations, art, political life, and national identity, providing a play on actual and possible, action and result, result and consequence that is as rigorous as it is creative. In the political realm, Jim Davidson asks What if Tasmania had become French?; Marilyn Lake wonders what would have happened had Alfred Deakin made a declaration of Australian independence; Helen Irving questions where we'd be if Federation had failed in 1900; James Walker asks What if Whitlam had won another opportunity to implement his program? The cultural questions include Peter Read asking What if Aborigines had never been assimilated?; Sean Scalmer examines the possible outcome if the attempted assassination of Arthur Calwell had been successful; and Ann Curthoys asks What if a men's movement had triumphed in the 1970s? What If? asks how our history has been written, what our nation has become, and what it might yet be.

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Contents

Statecraft
9
Society and Culture
10
What if Tasmania had become French?
15
Copyright

9 other sections not shown

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About the author (2006)

Stuart Macintyre is the Ernest Scott Professor of History at the University of Melbourne. His recent books include (with Anna Clark), The History Wars (Melbourne University Press, 2004), and (with Joe Isaac) The New Province for Law and Order- 100 Years of Australian Industrial Conciliation and Arbitration. Sean Scalmer is an Associate Professor in the School of Historical and Philosophical Studies at the University of Melbourne, Australia. His work includes Gandhi in the West: The Mahatma and the Rise of Radical Protest, Activist Wisdom: Practical Knowledge and Creative Tension in Social Movements (with Sarah Maddison); Dissent Events: Protest, the Media and the Political Gimmick in Australia, and On the Stump: Campaign Oratory and Democracy in the United States, Britain, and Australia which won the 2018 NSW Premier's History Award, General History Prize.

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