The Oxford History of Australia, Volume 2Geoffrey Bolton The history of Australia from the 1770s to the 1860s is seen as tightly linked to events and ideologies in an age of revolution and in particular to the social problems of industrialising Britain. Australia was colonized by believers in political equality and economic liberty, and this volume traces the development of the colonies into a stable society where organised sport prevented idleness and unrest among the lower orders and sectarianism and intercolonial rivalries absorbed the political energies of the middle classes. |
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... political context , turning reality upside down in order to conceal and justify the activities of these dominant groups . I wished to explore the darker side of Enlightenment theory , and in particular those debates which raged around ...
... political context , turning reality upside down in order to conceal and justify the activities of these dominant groups . I wished to explore the darker side of Enlightenment theory , and in particular those debates which raged around ...
Page 214
... political programme.9 In the colonies , newly arrived convicts and emigrants kept workers in touch with the new political theories and uprisings and with their repression . By the 1840s in Sydney , a factory system had developed where ...
... political programme.9 In the colonies , newly arrived convicts and emigrants kept workers in touch with the new political theories and uprisings and with their repression . By the 1840s in Sydney , a factory system had developed where ...
Page 216
... political economy and the urban democratic movement , accepting rather than challenging the leadership of liberal businessmen and professionals like W. A. Duncan and J. D. Lang . An admirer of American democracy , Lang's brand of ...
... political economy and the urban democratic movement , accepting rather than challenging the leadership of liberal businessmen and professionals like W. A. Duncan and J. D. Lang . An admirer of American democracy , Lang's brand of ...
Contents
Female Convict Experience 17881804 | 1 |
Thirty Acres | 32 |
Hunters and Collectors | 63 |
Copyright | |
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A. G. L. Shaw Aboriginal acres Angus & Robertson arrived Australian colonies B. H. Fletcher Bass Strait Bligh Botany Bay Britain British Cape capital Clark Collins colony's convict labourers convict women culture developed Diemen's Land diggers early economic emancipists emigrants England especially European ex-convict expedition exploration Factory farming female Flinders gold Governor grant Hawkesbury Hobart HRNSW Hunter ideal immigrants industry institutions James John Journal JRAHS L. E. Threlkeld liberal London Macarthur Macquarie male convicts Melbourne missionaries moral Norfolk Island NSW LC V&P officers Pacific Parramatta pastoral pastoralists Pemulwuy penal police political population Port Jackson Port Phillip Press problem punishment reformers Report savage schools scientific Select Committee servants settlement settlers sexual sheep ships social Society South Australia South Wales South Wales Corps Swan River Sydney Tasmanian theorists theory trade Transportation Van Diemen's Land Victoria voyage William workers