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Books > Humanities > History > Australasian & Pacific history > General
The Jerilderie and Cameron Letters are Ned Kelly's only extant
writings.
This volume is the most detailed case study of land tenure in
Hawai'i. Focusing on kuleana (homestead land) in Kahana, O'ahu,
from 1846 to 1920, the author challenges commonly held views
concerning the Great Mahele (Division) of 1846-1855 and its
aftermath. There can be no argument that in the fifty years prior
to the 1893 overthrow of the Hawaiian monarchy, ninety percent of
all land in the Islands passed into the control or ownership of
non-Hawaiians. This land grab is often thought to have begun with
the Great Mahele and to have been quicky accomplished because of
Hawaiians' ignorance of Western law and the sharp practices of
Haole (White) capitalists. What the Great Mahele did create were
separate land titles for two types of land (kuleana and ahupua'a)
that were traditionally thought of as indivisible and
interconnected, thus undermining an entire social system. With the
introduction of land titles and ownership, Hawaiian land could now
be bought, sold, mortgaged, and foreclosed. Using land-tenure
documents recently made available in the Hawai'i State Archives'
Foster Collection, the author presents the most complete picture of
land transfer to date. The Kahana database reveals that after the
1846 division, large-scale losses did not occur until a hitherto
forgotten mortgage and foreclosure law was passed in 1874.
Hawaiians fought to keep their land and livelihoods, using legal
and other, more innovative, means, including the creation of hui
shares. Contrary to popular belief, many of the investors and
speculators who benefitted from the sale of absenteeowned lands
awarded to ali'i (rulers) were not Haole but Pake (Chinese).
Kahana: How the Land Was Lost explains how Hawaiians of a century
ago were divested of their land - and how the past continues to
shape the Island's present as Hawaiians today debate the structure
of land-claim settlements.
Using archival materials from all three nations, this first
comparative study of French and Italian relations with the United
States during the early Cold War shows that French and Italian
ambitions of status, or prestige, crucially affected the formation
of the Western Alliance. While attention to outside appearances had
a long historic tradition for both European nations, the notion was
compounded by their humiliation in World War II and their
consequent fear of further demotion. Only by promoting an American
hegemony over Europe could France and Italy aspire respectively to
attain continental leadership and equality with the other great
European powers. For its part, Washington carefully calibrated
concessions of mere status with the more substantial issues of
international roles.
A recent trend in both U.S. and European historiography of the
Cold War has emphasized the role that America's allies had in
shaping the post-World War II international system. Combining
diplomatic, strategic, economic, and cultural insights, and
reassessing the main events from post-war reconstruction to the
Middle Eastern crises of the late 1950s, Brogi reaches two major
conclusions: that the United States helped the two allies to
recover enough self-esteem to cope with their own decline; and that
both the French and the Italian leaders, with constant pressure
from Washington, progressively adapted to a notion of prestige no
longer based solely on nationalism, but also on their capacity to
promote, or even master, continental integration. With this focus
on image, Brogi finally suggests a background to today's changing
patterns of international relations, as civilizational values
become increasingly important at the expense of more familiar
indices of economic and military power.
The stories of Kaua'i's ruling chiefs were passed from generation
to generation in songs and narratives recited by trained
storytellers either formally at the high chief's court or
informally at family gatherings. Their chronology was ordered by a
ruler's genealogy, which, in the case of the pua ali'i (flower of
royalty), was illustrious and far reaching and could be traced to
one of the four great gods of Polynesia - Kane, Ku, Lono, and
Kanaloa. In these legends, Hawaiians of old sought answers to the
questions "Who are we?" "Who are our ancestors and where do they
come from?" "What lessons can be learned from their conduct?" Na
Pua Ali'i o Kaua'i presents the stories of the men and women who
ruled the island of Kaua'i from its first settlement to the final
rebellion against Kamehameha I's forces in 1824. Only fragments
remain of the nearly two-thousand-year history of the people who
inhabited Kaua'i before the coming of James Cook in 1778. Now
scattered in public and private archives and libraries, these
pieces of Hawai'i's precontact past were recorded in the nineteenth
century by such determined individuals as David Malo, Samuel
Kamakau, and Abraham Fornander. All known genealogical references
to the Kaua'i ali'i nui (paramount chiefs) have been gathered here
and placed in chronological order and are interspersed with legends
of great voyages, bitter wars, courageous heroes, and passionate
romances that together form a rich and invaluable resource.
If you centre a globe on Kiritimati (Christmas Island), all you see
around it is a vast expanse of ocean. Islands of various sizes
float in view while glimpses of continents encroach on the fringes,
but this is a view dominated by water. The immense stretch of the
Pacific Ocean is inhabited by a diverse array of peoples and
cultures bound by a common thread: their relationship with the sea.
The rich history of the Pacific is explored through specific
objects, each one beautifully illustrated, from the earliest human
engagement with the Pacific through to the modern day. With entries
covering mapping, trade, whaling, flora and fauna, and the myriad
vessels used to traverse the ocean, Pacific builds on recent
interest in the voyages of James Cook to tell a broader history.
This visually stunning publication highlights the importance of an
ocean that covers very nearly a third of the surface of the globe,
and which has dramatically shaped the world and people around it.
The Gallipoli expedition was the bold and audacious plan of Winston
Churchill, amongst others, to force the Dardanelles narrows, by sea
and by land, to capture Constantinople from the Turks and to open
the Black Sea to ships taking supplies and arms for the Russians on
their immense German front. The campaign failed with catastrophic
loss of life on all sides, but again and again, unbeknown to the
Allies, they came close to achieving a goal that might have led to
victory overall. This book, first published in 1956, is still
regarded as the best and definitive account of the campaign. It won
the Sunday Times Best Book of the Year Award as well as the
inaugural Duff Cooper prize when the winner could choose who would
present the award. Appropriately enough, Moorehead chose Churchill
to make the presentation because the book demonstrated that the
faults were not in the conception of the plan. Indeed, long after
Churchill had resigned in disgrace, a new fleet was being assembled
to again attempt to force the Dardanelles in 1919, which was
cancelled when the war ceased and the Armistice was signed. Seen in
the new light that Moorehead revealed, the Gallipoli campaign was
no longer regarded as a blunder or a reckless gamble; it was the
most imaginative conception of the war, and its potentialities were
almost beyond reckoning. Certainly in its strictly military aspect
its influence was enormous. It was the greatest amphibious
operation which mankind had known up till then, and it took place
in circumstances in which nearly everything was experimental: in
the use of submarines and aircraft, in the trial of modern naval
guns against artillery on the shore, in the manoeuvre of landing
armies in small boats on a hostile coast, in the use of radio, or
the aerial bomb, the landmine, and many other novel devices. These
things lead on through Dunkirk and the Mediterranean landings to
the invasion of Normandy in the Second World War. In 1940 there was
very little the Allied commanders could learn from the long
struggle against the Kaiser's armies in the trenches in France. But
Gallipoli was a mine of information about the complexities of the
modern war of manoeuvre, of the combined operation by land and sea
and sky; and the correction of the errors made then was the basis
of the victory of 1945. "the story of one of the great military
tragedies of the twentieth century, which no writer has described
better than Alan Moorehead." Sir Max Hastings.
People and Change in Australia arose from a conviction that more
needs to be done in anthropology to give a fuller sense of the
changing lives and circumstances of Australian indigenous
communities and people. Much anthropological and public discussion
remains embedded in traditionalizing views of indigenous people,
and in accounts that seem to underline essential and apparently
timeless difference. In this volume the editors and contributors
assume that "the person" is socially defined and reconfigured as
contexts change, both immediate and historical. Essays in this
collection are grounded in Australian locales commonly termed
"remote." These indigenous communities were largely established as
residential concentrations by Australian governments, some first as
missions, most in areas that many of the indigenous people involved
consider their homelands. A number of these settlements were
located in proximity to settler industries including pastoralism,
market-gardening, and mining. These are the locales that many
non-indigenous Australians think of as the homes of the most
traditional indigenous communities and people. The contributors
discuss the changing circumstances of indigenous people who
originate from such places. Some remain, while others travel far
afield. The accounts reveal a diversity of experiences and
histories that involve major dynamics of disembedding from country
and home locales, and re-embedding in new contexts, and
reconfigurations of relatedness. The essays explore dimensions of
change and continuity in childhood experience and socialization in
a desert community; the influence of Christianity in fostering both
individuation and relatedness in northeast Arnhem Land; the
diaspora of Central Australian Warlpiri people to cities and the
forms of life and livelihood they make there; adolescent
experiences of schooling away from home communities; youth in
kin-based heavy metal gangs configuring new identities, and
indigenous people of southeast Australia reflecting on whether an
"Aboriginal way" can be sustained. The volume takes a step toward
understanding the relation between changing circumstances and
changing lives of indigenous Australians today and provides a sense
of the quality and the feel of those lives.
is an important book for the study of Korean Christianity in
Australia and New Zealand. This important book contains 8 articles
by Korean Christian clergy and scholars who have experienced the
vibrancy of Korean Christianity in Australia and New Zealand. Many
of these scholars have been participants in the history-making
process. This book, therefore, is an indispensable resource for
scholars, pastors, lay people, and interested public who want to
understand the experience of Korean Christians better. The editor,
Yong-Sun Yang, is Professor of Systematic Theology at Wesley
Institute in Sydney, Australia.
Australia's Prime Minister and premier diplomat in the 1930/1940s,
this new biography presents him as a consistent internationalist
and places him in a global context. Stanley Melbourne Bruce was at
the centre of Imperial politics for more than two decades from the
early 1920s until the end of the Second World War. This new
biography presents Bruce as a consistent internationalist. Educated
in Melbourne and Cambridge, Bruce, as a businessman, was alive to
the importance of international commerce, and particularly
Anglo-Australian trade. This lay at the core of his
internationalism, which took the form in the 1920s of encouraging
the political and economic integration of the British Empire.
Bruce's punitive treatment of militant Australian trade unionists
and his upholding of constitutionalism and law and order in the
1920s was part of an effort to defend one form of internationalism,
commitment to the British Empire, against the competing
international ideology of communism. While continuing to support a
unified British Empire acting as a progressive force in world
affairs, Bruce championed stronger international collaboration
through the League of Nations and the United Nations and through
cooperation between the Empire and the United States.
When Matthew Flinders set out in 1801 to carry out a 'complete
examination and survey' of the coast of New Holland, little did he
know that he would be away for over ten years. Although he did not
coin the term 'Australia' he keenly advocated its use, rather than
the clumsy 'Terra Australis', and will always be associated with
its adoption. As well as his meticulous surveys and maps, he made
many observations on ship-board life, flora and fauna, and the
appearance and customs of the native peoples he encountered. Volume
2 deals with the second half of his Australian survey, followed by
his incarceration on Mauritius for over 6 years by the French, and
his eventual release and return to England.
A sweeping study that spans two continents and over three hundred
years of literary history, Antipodean America argues that images of
Australasia as an imagined "end of the earth" establishes the
presence of an understudied historical and global consciousness,
oriented toward the Pacific, in American literature. Paul Giles
shows how places like Australia and New Zealand become the silent
other whose likenesses to the US induce condescension, fear,
paranoia, envy, rivalry, and narcissistic appropriation. The
American engagement with Australasia, Giles demonstrates, has been
constant since the eighteenth century and it is evinced in works by
the most canonical figures in US literary history. Reading a range
of works by figures like Benjamin Franklin, Herman Melville, Emily
Dickinson, Mark Twain, Raymond Chandler, and John Ashbery,
alongside writers like Miles Franklin, Peter Carey, and J.M.
Coetzee, Antipodean America provides a welcome transnational
perspective that will redefine our perception of what constitutes
American literature.
When Matthew Flinders set out in 1801 to carry out a 'complete
examination and survey' of the coast of New Holland, little did he
know that he would be away for over ten years. Although he did not
coin the term 'Australia' he keenly advocated its use, rather than
the clumsy 'Terra Australis' and will always be associated with its
adoption. As well as his meticulous surveys and maps, he made many
observations on ship-board life, flora and fauna, and the
appearance and customs of the native peoples he encountered. Volume
1 starts with a thorough review of previous exploratory voyages to
the great Southern continent, and then proceeds to describe the
first part of his journey, from Portsmouth to Port Jackson
(Sydney).
This is the first international study of maternal care and maternal
mortality. Over the last two hundred years, different countries
developed quite different systems of maternal care. Death in
Childbirth is a meticulously researched analysis, firmly grounded
in the available statistics, of the evolution of those systems
between 1800 and 1950 in Britain, the USA, Australia and New
Zealand, and on the continent of Europe. Irvine Loudon examines the
effectiveness of various forms of maternal care by means of the
measurement of maternal mortality - the number of women who died as
a result of childbirth. His scholarly and comprehensive study sets
out to answer a number of important questions. What was the
relative risk of a home or hospital delivery, or a delivery by a
midwife as opposed to a doctor? What was the safest country in
which to have a baby, and what were the factors which accounted for
enormous international differences? Why, against all expectations,
did maternal mortality fail to decline significantly until the late
1930s? Death in Childbirth makes an invaluable contribution to
medical and social history.
From Greenwich Village to Guadalcanal in just over a year, David
Zellmer would find piloting a B-24 bomber in the South Pacific a
far cry from his life as a fledgling member of the Martha Graham
Dance Company. He soon discovered the unimagined thrills of first
flights and the astonishment of learning that an aerial spin was
merely a vertical pirouette which one spotted on a barn thousands
of feet below, instead of on a doorknob in Martha's studio.
Reconstructed from letters home, this captivating account traces
Zellmer's journey from New York to the islands of the South Pacific
as the 13th Air Force battled to push back the Japanese invaders in
1943 and 1944.
Spurred to action by encouraging letters from Martha Graham, who
urges him to document his participation in the great tragic play of
the Second World War, Zellmer struggles to come to terms with the
fears and joys of flying, of killing and being killed. Each stage
of the battle takes him farther and farther from those he loves,
until the soft night breezes and moon-splashed surf no longer work
their magic. From bombing runs against Truk, the infamous
headquarters of the Japanese Fleet, to much savored slivers of
civilization in Auckland and Sydney, the young pilot bemoans a
gnawing concern at a loss of sensation, the prospect of life--not
as a performer, but as a spectator. With distant memories of life
on the stage, he finds that only the threat of death can bring the
same intensity of feeling.
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