Harvest of the Suburbs

Harvest of the Suburbs
Author: Andrea Gaynor
Publisher: ISBS
Total Pages: 272
Release: 2006
Genre: Gardening
ISBN: 9781920694487

"Drawing on sources ranging from gardening books and magazines to statistics and oral history, Harvest of the suburbs challenges some widespread myths about food production in Australian cities, and traces the reasons for its enduring popularity. It describes changing attitudes and techniques, and explores the relationship between food production and a range of contemporary ideas relating to work, social organisation, gender roles, health and the body, and nature. In doing so, it provides new insights into the tension between the quest for independence and the desire for interdependence in suburban Australia." --book cover.

Unequal in Life

Unequal in Life
Author: Tony Vinson
Publisher:
Total Pages: 83
Release: 1999
Genre: New South Wales
ISBN: 9780733406270

The Kelly Outbreak, 1878-1880

The Kelly Outbreak, 1878-1880
Author: John McQuilton
Publisher: Melbourne University
Total Pages: 0
Release: 1987
Genre: History
ISBN: 9780522843323

This book examines the Kelly Outbreak against its geographical and social background. This book examines the Kelly Outbreak against its geographical and social background. Failure to unlock the land through selection had created a class of struggling selectors who felt that the established authority of squatters and police denied them justice. Their sympathy and support helped Ned come and go as he pleased, despite the price on his head. McQuilton's exciting narrative maintains suspense, and his unobtrusive scholarship fills in the details and corrects many errors whch the Kelly myth has accumulated over the years.

Robert Menzies

Robert Menzies
Author: Troy Bramston
Publisher: Scribe Publications
Total Pages: 255
Release: 2019-04-16
Genre: Biography & Autobiography
ISBN: 1925693503

A revelatory biography of Australia’s longest-serving prime minister. Robert Menzies claimed the prime ministership in 1939 and led the nation during the early years of the war, but resigned two years later when he lost the confidence of his party. His political career seemed over, and yet he staged one of the great comebacks to forge a new political party, devise a new governing philosophy, and craft a winning electoral approach that as to make him Australia’s longest-serving prime minister. The lessons Menzies learned — and the way he applied them — made him a model that every Liberal leader since has looked to for inspiration. But debate over Menzies’ life and legacy has never settled. Who was Robert Menzies, what did he stand for, what did he achieve? Troy Bramston has not only researched the official record and published accounts, but has also interviewed members of Menzies’ family, and his former advisers and ministers. He has also been given exclusive access to family letters, as well as to a series of interviews that Menzies gave that have never been revealed before. They are a major historical find, in which Menzies talks about his life, reflects on political events and personalities, offers political lessons, and candidly assesses his successors. Now with a new preface, Robert Menzies is the first biography in 20 years of the Liberal icon — and it contains important contemporary lessons for those who want to understand, and master, the art and science of politics.

Country

Country
Author: Andrea Gaynor
Publisher:
Total Pages: 274
Release: 2002
Genre: Human ecology
ISBN: 9780730758129

Reflects on the unique character of people's experiences in WA landscapes. It explains some of the major environmental changes of the past two centuries and considers their cultural meaning.

Returning the Kulkyne

Returning the Kulkyne
Author: John Burch
Publisher:
Total Pages: 0
Release: 2017-04
Genre: History
ISBN: 9780646967523

The Kulkyne is a unique environment of semi-permanent lakes and woodlands formed the Murray River overflowing into the Mallee south of Mildura. Before colonial occupation, it was one of the most densely settled areas of Aboriginal Australia. Returning the Kulkyne tells the story of the colonial discovery and use of the Kulkyne tells the story of the colonial discovery and use of the Kulkyne as a squatting station, and later as a state forest. The land's Aboriginal owners resisted their dispossession, remained independent and made a place for themselves in the pastoral world, but colonial settlement devastated their communities and they were wrongly declared extinct.