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Books > History > Australasian & Pacific history > General
This book records the World War II experiences of Captain Elmer
E. Haynes, who flew low-altitude night radar strikes against
Japanese shipping in the South China Sea, and daylight raids
against various enemy land based installations in eastern and
central China. Haynes flew secretly developed B-24 Liberator
bombers that were equipped with radar which had been integrated
with the Norden bombsight for night missions. These B-24's operated
with the 14th Air Force--General Chennault's Flying Tigers. The
bombing attacks were so accurate and successful that, in a little
over a year, Haynes and his fellow pilots had sunk approximately a
million tons of Japanese shipping. Due to the Top Secret
classification of this equipment, the story of the radar B-24's,
operating with the Flying Tigers, has never before been told.
The war in the Pacific was definitely brought to a quicker end
by the devastating destruction caused by the sinking of such a
tremendous number of Japanese merchant and naval vessels in the
South China Sea. In its three years of operation, the 14th Air
Force was credited with sinking two and a half million tons of
enemy shipping. The radar-equipped B-24's were also used on
reconnaissance missions--locating Japanese convoys for U.S. naval
ships and submarines. Military historians, and anyone interested in
World War II, will find this story highly informative, since it
discloses never before published facts about the development of
radar systems by the United States. This same radar technique was
used by B-17's during the saturation night bombing raids over
Germany.
This wide-ranging study of the Pacific Islands provides a dynamic
and provocative account of the peopling of the Pacific, and its
broad impact on world history. Spanning over 50,000 years of human
presence in an area which comprises one-third of our planet -
Melanesia, Micronesia and Polynesia - the narrative follows the
development of the region, from New Guinea's earliest settlement to
the creation of the modern Pacific states. Thoroughly revised and
updated in light of the most recent scholarship, the second edition
includes: * an overview of the events and developments in the
Pacific Islands over the last decade * coverage of the latest
archaeological discoveries * several new maps * an updated and
expanded bibliography Steven Roger Fischer's unique text provides a
highly accessible and invaluable introduction to the history of an
area which is currently emerging as pivotal in international
affairs. A History of the Pacific Islands traces the human history
of nearly one-third of the globe over a fifty-thousand year span.
This is history on a grand scale, taking the islands of Melanesia,
Micronesia and Polynesia from prehistoric culture to the present
day through a skilful interpretation of scholarship in the field.
Fischer's familiarity with work in archaeology and anthropology as
well as in history enriches the text, making this a book with wide
appeal for students and general readers.
This publication provides a lively study of the role that
Australians and New Zealanders played in defining the British
sporting concept of amateurism. In doing so, they contributed to
understandings of wider British identity across the sporting world.
This book, the first long-range history of the voluntary sector in
Australia and the first internationally to compare philanthropy for
Indigenous and non-Indigenous peoples in a settler society,
explores how the race and gender ideologies embedded in
philanthropy contributed to the construction of Australia's welfare
state.
"A comprehensive and authoritative reference work on an area that
ususally receives scant attention in more general reference works.
. . . This vast compendium is not likely to be superseded for many
years, and it is recommended for most libraries." Library Journal
Hollywood's South Seas and the Pacific War explores the
expectations, experiences, and reactions of Allied servicemen and
women who served in the wartime Pacific. Viewing the South Pacific
through the lens of Hollywood's South Seas, Americans and their
Allies expected to find glamorous women who resembled the famous
'sarong girl, ' Dorothy Lamour. But Dorothy was nowhere to be seen.
Despite those disappointments popular images proved resilient, and
at war's end the 'old' South Seas re-emerged almost unscathed.
Based on extensive archival research, Hollywood's South Seas and
the Pacific War explores the intersections between military
experiences and cultural history.
This edited collection investigates New Zealand's history as an
imperial power, and its evolving place within the British Empire.
It revises and expands the history of empire within, to and from
New Zealand by looking at the country's spheres of internal
imperialism, its relationship with Australia, its Pacific empire
and its outreach to Antarctica. The book critically revises our
understanding of the range of ways that New Zealand has played a
role as an imperial power, including the cultural histories of New
Zealand inside the British Empire, engagements with imperial
practices and notions of imperialism, the special significance of
New Zealand in the Pacific region, and the circulation of ideas of
empire both through and inside New Zealand over time. The essays in
this volume span social, cultural, political and economic history,
and in testing the concept of New Zealand's empire, the
contributors take new directions in both historiographical and
empirical research. -- .
William Redfern, surgeon, sailor, mutineer, prisoner and pioneer.
From his birth in approximately 1775 to joining the Royal Navy as a
ship's surgeon, it seemed William Redfern was destined for a life
of relative wealth and status, but all that changed in 1797, when
he was swept up in the infamous Nore Mutiny. At odds with his
fellow officers, Redfern was court-martialled for his actions and
sentenced to be hanged. Due to his profession, the sentence was
commuted to transportation for life and on arrival in New South
Wales, his exceptional surgical skills quickly saw him granted a
full pardon. He was soon central to the new colony's medical
services, was appointed personal surgeon to the Governor and
Assistant Surgeon of the Colonial Medical Services, but despite
becoming a wealthy landowner in his own right, he would forever
carry the `convict's stain' in the eyes of certain members of the
British Colonial establishment. Mostly remembered for the Sydney
suburb that bears his name, this outstanding new biography, in two
volumes, breathes fresh life into the story of William Redfern and
follows the rise and fall and subsequent rise again of one of
Australia's most influential early settlers. A pioneer of
immunisation techniques and an advocate for the role of hygiene and
nutrition he truly was one of the first to understand that
prevention was better than cure. William Redfern, surgeon, sailor,
mutineer, prisoner and pioneer. From his birth in approximately
1775 to joining the Royal Navy as a ship's surgeon, it seemed
William Redfern was destined for a life of relative wealth and
status, but all that changed in 1797, when he was swept up in the
infamous Nore Mutiny. At odds with his fellow officers, Redfern was
court-martialled for his actions and sentenced to be hanged. Due to
his profession, the sentence was commuted to transportation for
life and on arrival in New South Wales, his exceptional surgical
skills quickly saw him granted a full pardon. He was soon central
to the new colony's medical services, was appointed personal
surgeon to the Governor and Assistant Surgeon of the Colonial
Medical Services, but despite becoming a wealthy landowner in his
own right, he would forever carry the `convict's stain' in the eyes
of certain members of the British Colonial establishment. Mostly
remembered for the Sydney suburb that bears his name, this
outstanding new biography, in two volumes, breathes fresh life into
the story of William Redfern and follows the rise and fall and
subsequent rise again of one of Australia's most influential early
settlers. A pioneer of immunisation techniques and an advocate for
the role of hygiene and nutrition he truly was one of the first to
understand that prevention was better than cure.
A Rape of the Soul So Profound began when a young researcher
accidentally came upon restricted files in an archives collection.
What he read overturned all his assumptions about an important part
of Aboriginal experience and Australia's past. The book ends in the
present, 20 years later, in the aftermath of the Royal Commission
on the Stolen Generations. Along the way Peter Read investigates
how good intentions masked policies with inhuman results. He tells
the poignant stories of many individuals, some of whom were forever
broken and some who went on to achieve great things. This is a book
about much sorrow and occasional madness, about governments who
pretended things didn't happen, and about the opportunities offered
to right a great wrong.
How, when, and why has the Pacific been a locus for imagining
different futures by those living there as well as passing through?
What does that tell us about the distinctiveness or otherwise of
this "sea of islands"? Foregrounding the work of leading and
emerging scholars of Oceania, Pacific Futures brings together a
diverse set of approaches to, and examples of, how futures are
being conceived in the region and have been imagined in the past.
Individual chapters engage the various and sometimes contested
futures yearned for, unrealized, and even lost or forgotten, that
are particular to the Pacific as a region, ocean, island network,
destination, and home. Contributors recuperate the futures hoped
for and dreamed up by a vast array of islanders and outlanders-from
Indigenous federalists to Lutheran improvers to Cantonese small
business owners-making these histories of the future visible. In so
doing, the collection intervenes in debates about globalization in
the Pacific--and how the region is acted on by outside forces--and
postcolonial debates that emphasize the agency and resistance of
Pacific peoples in the context of centuries of colonial endeavor.
With a view to the effects of the "slow violence" of climate
change, the volume also challenges scholars to think about the
conditions of possibility for future-thinking at all in the midst
of a global crisis that promises cataclysmic effects for the
region. Pacific Futures highlights futures conceived in the context
of a modernity coproduced by diverse Pacific peoples, taking
resistance to categorization as a starting point rather than a
conclusion. With its hospitable approach to thinking about history
making and future thinking, one that is open to a wide range of
methodological, epistemological, and political interests and
commitments, the volume will encourage the writing of new histories
of the Pacific and new ways of talking about history in this field,
the region, and beyond.
In January 1788, the First Fleet arrived in New South Wales,
Australia and a thousand British men and women encountered the
people who would be their new neighbors. Dancing with Strangers
tells the story of what happened between the first British settlers
of Australia and these Aborigines. Inga Clendinnen interprets the
earliest written sources, and the reports, letters and journals of
the first British settlers in Australia. She reconstructs the
difficult path to friendship and conciliation pursued by Arthur
Phillip and the local leader 'Bennelong' (Baneelon) that was
ultimately destroyed by the assertion of profound cultural
differences. A Prize-winning archaeologist, anthropologist and
historian of ancient Mexican cultures, Inga Clendinnen has spent
most of her teaching career at La Trobe University in Bundoora,
Australia. Ambivalent Conquests: Maya and Spaniard in Yucatan
(Cambridge, 1989) and Aztecs: An Interpretation (Cambridge, 1995)
are two of her best-known scholarly works; Tiger's Eye: A Memoir,
(Scribner, 2001) describes her battle against liver cancer. Reading
the Holocaust (Cambridge, 2002) explores World War II genocide from
various perspectives.
The 1970s saw the Aboriginal people of Australia struggle for
recognition of their postcolonial rights. Rural communities, where
large Aboriginal populations lived, were provoked as a consequence
of social fragmentation, unparalleled unemployment, and other major
economic and political changes. The ensuing riots, protests, and
law-and-order campaigns in New South Wales captured the tense
relations that existed between indigenous people, the police, and
the criminal justice system. In Protests, Land Rights, and Riots,
Barry Morris shows how neoliberal policies in Australia targeted
those who were least integrated socially and culturally, and who
enjoyed fewer legitimate economic opportunities. Amidst intense
political debate, struggle, and conflict, new forces were unleashed
as a post-settler colonial state grappled with its past. Morris
provides a social analysis of the ensuing effects of neoliberal
policy and the way indigenous rights were subsequently undermined
by this emerging new political orthodoxy in the 1990s.
William Redfern, surgeon, sailor, mutineer, prisoner and pioneer.
From his birth in approximately 1775 to joining the Royal Navy as a
ship's surgeon, it seemed William Redfern was destined for a life
of relative wealth and status, but all that changed in 1797, when
he was swept up in the infamous Nore Mutiny. At odds with his
fellow officers, Redfern was court-martialed for his actions and
sentenced to be hanged. Due to his profession, the sentence was
commuted to transportation for life and on arrival in New South
Wales, his exceptional surgical skills quickly saw him granted a
full pardon. He was soon central to the new colony's medical
services, was appointed personal surgeon to the Governor and
Assistant Surgeon of the Colonial Medical Services, but despite
becoming a wealthy landowner in his own right, he would forever
carry the `convict's stain' in the eyes of certain members of the
British Colonial establishment. Mostly remembered for the Sydney
suburb that bears his name, this outstanding new biography, in two
volumes, breathes fresh life into the story of William Redfern and
follows the rise and fall and subsequent rise again of one of
Australia's most influential early settlers. A pioneer of
immunisation techniques and an advocate for the role of hygiene and
nutrition he truly was one of the first to understand that
prevention was better than cure.
The Second World War was a dominant experience in Australian
history. For the first time the country faced the threat of
invasion. The economy and society were mobilised to an
unprecedented degree, with 550 000 men and women, or one in twelve
of a population of over 7 million, serving in the armed forces
overseas. Social patterns and family life were disrupted.
Politically, the war gave a new legitimacy to the Australian Labor
Party which had been confined to the wilderness of the Opposition
at the Federal level for most of the inter-war years. The powers of
the Federal government increased and a new momentum for social
reform was generated at the popular and governmental level. In the
international sphere, the war fundamentally shook Australian
confidence in the power on which it had relied for generations,
Great Britain. It generated a sense of independence in Australian
foreign policy and initiated a new, if halting and problematic,
realignment towards the United States. In this accessible book Joan
Beaumont, Kate Darian-Smith, David Lee, David Lowe, Marnie
Haig-Muir, Roy Hay and David Walker consider the range of
Australia's experience of this conflict. In a single volume they
draw together the many aspects of the war and distil the current
state of historical scholarship. Australia's War 1939-45 will be
invaluable to tertiary students and of enormous interest to the
reader concerned with the social, political and military history of
Australia. A companion volume on the First World War is also
available.
'A fine beginning for those intent on understanding the colonial
past that shaped black and white Australia.' - Richard Broome,
author of Aboriginal Australians Terrible Hard Biscuits introduces
the main themes in the history of Aboriginal Australia: the
complexity of Aboriginal-European relations since 1788, how
Aboriginal identity and cultures survived invasion, dispossession
and dislocation, and how indigenous Australians have survived to
take their place in today's society.Each essay in Terrible Hard
Biscuits has been chosen for the clarity of its writing and for its
depth of understanding. The Aboriginal and non-Aboriginal authors
range across Australia's post-invasion history and their accounts
focus on the more traditionally oriented communities in remote
areas as well as on urban and fringe dwellers.For twenty years the
journal Aboriginal History has attracted the best writing on
Australia's Aboriginal past. Each essay in Terrible Hard Biscuits
was selected from this journal to provide essential reading for
students of Aboriginal studies and Australian studies. The
chronological and geographic range of the contents will prove
invaluable in surveying a crucial element of Australia's past - and
present.
In 1908, Arthur Maurice Hocart and William Halse Rivers Rivers
conducted fieldwork in the Solomon Islands and elsewhere in Island
Melanesia that served as the turning point in the development of
modern anthropology. The work of these two anthropological pioneers
on the small island of Simbo brought about the development of
participant observation as a methodological hallmark of social
anthropology. This would have implications for Rivers' later work
in psychiatry and psychology, and Hocart's work as a comparativist,
for which both would largely be remembered despite the novelty of
that independent fieldwork on remote Pacific islands in the early
years of the 20th Century. Contributors to this volume-who have all
carried out fieldwork in those Melanesian locations where Hocart
and Rivers worked-give a critical examination of the research that
took place in 1908, situating those efforts in the broadest
possible contexts of colonial history, imperialism, the history of
ideas and scholarly practice within and beyond anthropology.
'This is a provocative re-examination of our legal history
appearing at a time when Australians are reconsidering both their
past and their future.' - The Hon. Justice Michael Kirby AC CMG,
President of the New South Wales Court of AppealThe imperial view
of Australian law was that it was a weak derivative of English law.
In An Unruly Child, Bruce Kercher rewrites history. He reveals that
since 1788 there has been a contest between the received legal
wisdom of Mother England and her sometimes unruly offspring. The
resulting law often suited local interests, but was not always more
just.Kercher also shows that law has played a major role in
Australian social history. From the convict settlements and the
Eureka stockade in the early years to the Harvester Judgement, the
White Australia Policy and most recently the Mabo case, central
themes of Australian history have been framed by the legal
system.An Unruly Child is a groundbreaking work which will
influence our understanding of Australia's history and its legal
system.
Australia's War, 1914-18 explores Australia's involvement in the
First World War and the effect this had on the nation' s society.
In this very accessible book, Joan Beaumont, Pam Maclean, Marnie
Haig-Muir and David Lowe focus on: where Australians fought and
why; the tensions and realignments within Australian politics in
the period of 1914-18; the stresses of the war on Australian
society, especially on women and those whom wartime hysteria cast
in the role of the 'enemy' at home; the impact of the war on the
country's economy; the role played by Australia in international
diplomacy; and finally, the creation and influence of the Anzac
legend.Once dominated by the battlefield and official accounts of
the war correspondent and official historian, C.E.W. Bean,
Australian writing on the war has acquired a new depth and
sophistication. Studies of the home front reveal a society riven by
divisions without precedent in the nation's history.This single
volume will be invaluable to tertiary students and of enormous
interest to the reader concerned with the social, political and
military history of Australia.
Colonial Genocide has been seen increasingly as a stepping-stone to
the European genocides of the twentieth century, yet it remains an
under-researched phenomenon. This volume reconstructs instances of
Australian genocide and for the first time places them in a global
context. Beginning with the arrival of the British in 1788 and
extending to the 1960s, the authors identify the moments of
radicalization and the escalation of British violence and ethnic
engineering aimed at the Indigenous populations, while carefully
distinguishing between local massacres, cultural genocide, and
genocide itself. These essays reflect a growing concern with the
nature of settler society in Australia and in particular with the
fate of the tens of thousands of children who were forcibly taken
away from their Aboriginal families by state agencies. Long
considered a relatively peaceful settlement, Australian society
contained many of the pathologies that led to the exterminatory and
eugenic policies of twentieth century Europe.
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