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This new study offers a timely and compelling account of why past
generations of Australians have seen the north of the country as an
empty land, and how those perceptions of Australia's tropical
regions impact current policy and shape the self-image of the
nation. It considers the origins of these concerns - from fears of
invasion and moral qualms about leaving resources lying idle, from
apprehensions about white nationhood coming under international
censure and misgivings about the natural attributes of the north -
and elucidates Australians' changing appreciations of the natural
environments of the north, their shifting attitudes toward race and
their unsettled conceptions of Asia.
This new study offers a timely and compelling account of why past
generations of Australians have seen the north of the country as an
empty land, and how those perceptions of Australia's tropical
regions impact current policy and shape the self-image of the
nation. It considers the origins of these concerns - from fears of
invasion and moral qualms about leaving resources lying idle, from
apprehensions about white nationhood coming under international
censure and misgivings about the natural attributes of the north -
and elucidates Australians' changing appreciations of the natural
environments of the north, their shifting attitudes toward race and
their unsettled conceptions of Asia.
An exploration of the doomed race theory and its place in the
Western imagination. This study applies observations to the
relationship between white Australians and the Aboriginals.
White Australians once confidently-if regretfully-believed that the
Aboriginal people were doomed to extinction. Even in the 1950s,
Australian children were still being taught that the Australian
Aboriginals were a dying race who would eventually disappear from
the face of the earth. In Imagined Destinies, Russell McGregor
explores the origins and the gradual demise of the 'doomed race'
theory, which was unquestioned in nineteenth-century European
thinking and remained uncontested until the 1930s. White
perceptions of Australia s indigenous people and their future had
been shaped by Enlightenment ideas about progress, Darwin s new
theories on the survival of the fittest, and other European
philosophical concepts. Imagined Destinies provides a challenging
analysis and history of an idea which has exerted a powerful
influence over white Australian attitudes to, and policies for,
Aboriginal people. Indeed, its long shadow may still be with us.
McGregor offers a holistic interpretation of the complex
relationship between Indigenous and settler Australians during the
middle four decades of the twentieth century. Combining the
perspectives of political, social and cultural history in a
coherent narrative, he provides a cogent analysis of how the
relationship changed, and the impediments to change.
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