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Inhaltsverzeichnis
List of Illustrations
Acknowledgements
Introduction: Ends and Beginnings: Life and Mind at the Australian Fin de Siècle
1. The Bush Undertaker: Henry Lawson and the Stragglers of the Second Industrial Revolution
2. Rose Summerfield Imagines a New Woman
3. The Wanderer: Christopher Brennan’s Two Lives in Fin de Siècle Sydney
4. ‘A Modern Eve’: Vida Goldstein Stands for Parliament
5. ‘Some Disquieting Symptoms’: Alfred Deakin’s Nervous Breakdown
6. David Unaipon, ‘The Super-Aborigine’
7. John Dwyer’s Family Stories
Conclusion: Fin de Siècle Afterlife
Endnotes
Bibliography
Index
Über den Autor / die Autorin
Mark Hearn is a senior lecturer in the Department of History and Archaeology, Macquarie University, Australia. His research focuses on the history and historical theory of the fin de siècle, and the history of ideas and governance in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. He has published several books and has had scholarly articles accepted in a wide range of journals including Journal of Australian Studies, Gender and History and Rethinking History. In 2018 he was a visiting scholar at the Centre for Philosophical Studies in History, University of Oulu, Finland, researching the historical periodization of the fin de siècle.
Zusammenfassung
This book explores the fin de siècle, an era of powerful global movements and turbulent transition, in Australia and beyond through a series of biographical microhistories. From the first wave feminist Rose Summerfield and the working class radical John Dwyer, to the indigenous rights advocate David Unaipon and the poet Christopher Brennan, Hearn traces the transnational identities, philosophies, ideas and cultures that characterised this era.
Examining the struggles and aspirations of fin de siècle lives; respect for the rights of women and indigenous peoples, the injustices and hardship inflicted on working men and women, and the ways in which they imagined a better world, this book examines the transformation and renewal brought about by fin de siècle ideas. It examines the distinctive characteristics of this ‘great acceleration’ of economic, technological and cultural forces that swept the globe at the turn of the 19th century both within an Australian context and on the world stage. Asserting that the fin de siècle was significant for the making of modern Australia, and demonstrating the impact Australian fin de siècle lives had on the transnational and global movements of the era, Mark Hearn traces the turbulent nature of the fin de siècle imagination in Australia, and its response to these dynamic forces.
Vorwort
A transnational study of the fin de siècle era in Australia through biographical microhistories.
Zusatztext
Mark Hearn is the first historian to bring this important period in Australian cultural and political history – the 1890s – fully into the global history of modernity. Far from displaying an isolated colonial backwater, his study of seven emblematic lives of the fin de siècle gives us a unique insight into how leading Australian thinkers grappled with a modern world that was both accelerating and enervating. This is a fresh interpretation of a period that has long fascinated historians of Australia for its brew of nationalism, radicalism, utopianism and the occult, but it will interest anyone curious about how modern life reshaped imaginative possibilities at the same time as it generated new anxieties. This is a ground-breaking cultural history that invites us to rethink a formative era.