Democratic Adventurer: Graham Berry and the Making of Australian Politics
By (Author) Sean Scalmer
Monash University Publishing
Monash University Publishing
1st May 2020
Australia
General
Non Fiction
B
Hardback
480
Width 153mm, Height 234mm
Graham Berry (18221904) was colonial Australias most gifted, creative and controversial politician. A riveting speaker, a newspaper proprietor and editor, and the founder of Australias first mass political party, he wielded these tools to launch an age of reform: spearheading the adoption of a protectionist economic policy, the payment of parliamentarians, and the taxing of large landholdings. He also sought the reform of the Constitution, precipitating a crisis that the London Times likened to a revolution. This book recovers Berrys forgotten and fascinating life. It explores his drives and aspirations, the scandals and defeats that nearly derailed his career, and his remarkable rise from linen-draper and grocer to adored popular leader. It establishes his formative influence on later Australian politics. And it also uses Berrys life to reflect on the possibilities and constraints of democratic politics, hoping thereby to enrich the contemporary political imagination.
"With his close attention to the repertoire of colonial politics, the language and rituals whereby statesmen gained and wielded power, Sean Scalmer has illuminated the history of settler democracy. Here he tackles that most audacious of all the democratic adventurers, David Berry, a self-made man who acquired an almost despotic authority on the condition, as he remarked, that I did not exercise it. But Berry used his popular following to plunge Victoria into its most profound constitutional crisis, and this book establishes his lasting legacy." -- Stuart Macintyre
Sean Scalmer teaches at the University of Melbourne, where he is a Professor of History. He is the author of several works of political history, including the prize-winning On the Stump (2017), Gandhi in the West (2011), The Little History of Australian Unionism (2006) and Dissent Events (2002).