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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... University Press Beverley Kingston 1988 First published 1988 This book is copyright . Apart from any fair dealing for the purposes of private study , research , criticism or review as permitted under the Copyright Act , no part may be ...
... University Press Beverley Kingston 1988 First published 1988 This book is copyright . Apart from any fair dealing for the purposes of private study , research , criticism or review as permitted under the Copyright Act , no part may be ...
Page 206
... university educa- tion were luxuries when educational resources were already so thinly stretched . Most of the need for professional skills and higher education was supplied by continuing im- migration.93 Education at a British university ...
... university educa- tion were luxuries when educational resources were already so thinly stretched . Most of the need for professional skills and higher education was supplied by continuing im- migration.93 Education at a British university ...
Page 207
... Universities existed in Sydney ( 1850 ) and Melbourne ( 1853 ) . Charles Lilley's agitation in the 1870s for a university in Queensland came to nothing for nearly forty years , but South Australia and Tasmania set up their own universities ...
... Universities existed in Sydney ( 1850 ) and Melbourne ( 1853 ) . Charles Lilley's agitation in the 1870s for a university in Queensland came to nothing for nearly forty years , but South Australia and Tasmania set up their own universities ...
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Aborigines Adelaide Alfred Deakin Austra Australian colonies became began bourne Brisbane Britain British building Catholic cent chap Chinese Christian church civilization coal convict culture decades early economic electors especially farmers farming federation female George Higinbotham girls groups growth Henry Henry Lawson History houses ibid immigrants important industry Irish labour land late nineteenth late nineteenth-century legislation London male Marcus Clarke marriage married Melbourne ment Michael Davitt moral native Nellie Stewart nineteenth century Northern Territory organized Pacific parliament pastoral period political population produced Queensland railway religion responsibility River rural schools seemed settlement settlers sexual social society South Australia South Wales sport squatters St Lucia survival Sydney Tasmania thought tion towns trade traditional tralia urban Victoria votes wages wealth Western Australia wives women wool workers young