$35.00 (Paperback book / Allen & Unwin / ISBN:9781741145816)
North Of Capricorn
This scintillating account by Henry Reynolds, a revisionist
history in its best sense, is a door opening wide onto [another
Australia].'- Nicolas Rothwell, The Australian
'Reynolds reveals yet another forgotten aspect of our shared
history.' - The Age
'This is a fine book, logically and convincingly argued.' - John
Bailey, The Age
'This comprehensive history will add a significant dimension to our
self-understanding.' - Nigel Kraus, Newcastle Herald
'History may be in the past but, as this book demonstrates, it has
an unsettling habit of entering the present.' - Christopher
Bantick, Sunday Tasmanian
When you stand on Cape York, at Australia's northernmost tip, you
are closer to Vanuatu than Canberra, as close to Manila as
Melbourne. The tension between Australia's Southeast Asian
geography and its British colonial history is a key to
understanding the country's identity. And nowhere was this more
vividly played out than in the towns of Australia's tropical north
during the last years of the nineteenth century.
These towns - from Mackay to Broome - were successful, dynamic,
multi-racial societies peopled with Melanesian cane workers,
Chinese entrepreneurs, Japanese deep-sea divers and adventurers
from as far away as Polynesia and Ceylon. Aborigines and Torres
Strait Islanders mixed freely with the multi-racial populations -
and faced less discrimination than in the whiter South.
But these piebald' societies were a threat, an affront to the new
nation obsessed, in the words of the Prime Minister, with the
purity of race . And they would soon be snuffed out by the
introduction of the White Australia policy in 1901 the first social
legislation of the brand-new federal government.
Written with pace and simplicity, painstakingly researched and
profusely illustrated, North of Capricorn is expansive,
thorough and groundbreaking in its scope. More than that, it
succeeds as a richly human illustration of the effects of race and
politics on national history.