From its very inception Australia has been a derivative society:
First as part of the British Empire and then, soon after World War
II, what Mosler considers the American Empire and the new
end-of-century Americanized global culture. This has meant that
Australia has struggled to attain its own identity. Mosler explores
that struggle for national independence, a struggle that seems to
be doomed to failure.
According to Mosler, the reasons for this failure lie in
Australia's propensity to remain a recreational culture; a culture
more attuned to pleasure and dependence than regimented hard work
and the concomitant collective pattern of national assertiveness.
The Australian economy, defense arrangements, culture, and
psychology have been dominated by other nations and transnational
forces. The prospects for the nation in the future appear to be
somewhat grim unless this historical pattern of dependence and lack
of respect, indeed almost contempt, for national institutions is
reversed. A provocative analysis that will be of interest to
scholars, students, researchers, and anyone interested in
Australian history and contemporary life and culture.
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