The Europeans in Australia: Volume Two - Democracy

Front Cover
UNSW Press, Jul 1, 2016 - History - 600 pages

 'It is the duty of historians to be, wherever they can, accurate, precise, humane, imaginative - using moral imagination above all – and even-handed.' - Alan Atkinson

The second of three volumes of the landmark, award-winning series The Europeans in Australia gives an account of early settlement by Britain. It tells of the political and intellectual origins of this extraordinary undertaking that began during the 1780s, a decade of extraordinary creativity and the climax of the European Enlightenment. 

Volume Two, Democracy, takes the story from around 1815 to the early 1870s. By exploring the nineteenth-century ‘communications revolution’ Atkinson casts new light on the way Australia first found its place in a ‘global’ world. This volume is more than a story of geography and politics. It describes the way people thought and felt. Throughout the trilogy Atkinson traces subtle and sudden shifts of ‘common imagination’ by analysing the lives of both powerful and ordinary Australians. He sets out the ideas and the imagery that moved and marked the people. This book, like all his work, is grounded in thorough and rigorous scholarship yet imbued with compassion and insight. Written ‘from the inside’, it is – as he says – history ‘caught up with the flesh and memory it describes’. 

The culmination of an extraordinary career in the writing and teaching of Australian history,The Europeans in Australia grapples with the Australian historical experience as a whole from the point of view of the settlers from Europe. Ambitious and unique, it is the first such large, single-author account since Manning Clark’s A History of Australia.

 

Contents

Maps
STILL THEY KEPT COMING
The Well Read
Making a Name
Convict Opinion
A Most Extensive Scale
Conscience
THEIR METHOD OF UTTERANCE
THE MASSES UNPACKED
Digging Deep
Ink and Affection
Railway Dreaming
To Feel as
Our Outer Edge
Afterword
Bibliography

Black and White
God and Humanity

Common terms and phrases

About the author (2016)

Alan Atkinson has a PhD from the Australian National University in Canberra, as well as a Masters degree from Trinity College, The University of Dublin. His books include Camden: Farm and Village Life in Early New South Wales and The Commonwealth of Speech.

Bibliographic information