The Oxford History of Australia, Volume 3Late nineteenth-century Australia claimed one of the world's highest standards of living and was seen as one of the most successful examples of the transplantation of British culture. Yet beneath the surface prosperity, there lay a great deal of uncertainty and conflict, including clashes among churches, the crash of the 1890s, pressure for federation, and the challenging of traditional views of education, women's roles, and the family. This volume takes a skeptical look at many of the common perceptions of Australia in the Victorian era, concentrating on human values rather than on the rhetoric of national achievement. |
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Page 8
... civilization over what had become a quietly desperate com- mitment to overinvestment in fantasy.21 Western Australia's most lucrative industries in the late 1880s after wool and sheep , were exotic : pearls and pearlshell found along ...
... civilization over what had become a quietly desperate com- mitment to overinvestment in fantasy.21 Western Australia's most lucrative industries in the late 1880s after wool and sheep , were exotic : pearls and pearlshell found along ...
Page 57
... civilization was basically British . There were plenty who did not like Britain , but they did not envisage a world in which Britain was not a powerful presence , nor British values the standard of behaviour . The very existence of the ...
... civilization was basically British . There were plenty who did not like Britain , but they did not envisage a world in which Britain was not a powerful presence , nor British values the standard of behaviour . The very existence of the ...
Page 61
... civilization , posed new difficulties for the understand- ing and control of those primitive instincts . Anxiety about the quality of the population , the purity of the race , the perfect fragility of civilization were not unique to ...
... civilization , posed new difficulties for the understand- ing and control of those primitive instincts . Anxiety about the quality of the population , the purity of the race , the perfect fragility of civilization were not unique to ...
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Aborigines accepted activity Adelaide already authority became become began Book Britain British building Catholic cent chap Christian church civilization colonies continued culture early economic effect especially established example experience farming federation forms groups growth half Henry History houses idea immigrants important industry interest Irish John labour land late later legislation less living London Marcus Clarke marriage Melbourne ment moral natural nineteenth century organized parliament period political population possible practice Press problems produced Queensland railway responsibility rural schools seemed seen selection settlement social society South Australia South Wales Sydney Tasmania thought tion towns trade traditional University Victoria wealth Western Australia women young