Freshly Printed - allow 8 days lead
Australia
The Quiet Continent
The main theme of this 1998 second edition is the sober hard-won progress of isolated colonies struggling to increase their population and pay their way.
Douglas Pike (Author)
9780521096041, Cambridge University Press
Paperback / softback, published 2 January 1970
280 pages
20.3 x 12.7 x 1.6 cm, 0.31 kg
The 1998 second edition of this valuable study of the growth of the Australian nation. Professor Pike's main theme is the sober hard-won progress of isolated colonies struggling to increase their population and pay their way. He tells of uneven advance, of success and failure, of windfall wealth. Most of all he tells of efforts of men to make themselves secure in a land starved of capital and private investment. This edition includes developments since 1958. Pike surveys important political events in South East Asia since the mid-1950s, in particular, Australia's involvement in the defence of Malaysia and in Vietnam. The invasion of Australia's open spaces by men and machines in search of minerals was perhaps the most exciting development of the 1960s. The success of these excavations and of the remarkable urban and industrial growth and expansion of Australian agricultural production in the 1970s and 1980s are also explored.
List of illustrations
1. A remote continent
2. A lonely land
3. Survival: 1788–1820
4. Separation: 1820–40
5. Expansion 1840–60
6. Transition: 1860–80
7. Readjustment: 1880–1900
8. Federation: 1900–20
9. Disillusion: 1920–40
10. Nation: 1940–68
11. Destiny
Index.