An Immigrant Nation Seeks Cohesion: Australia from 1788
By (Author) James Jupp
Anthem Press
Anthem Press
10th April 2018
United Kingdom
Professional and Scholarly
Non Fiction
Hardback
236
Width 153mm, Height 229mm, Spine 26mm
454g
An Immigrant Nation Seeks Cohesion presents Australian traditions, myths and legends in an understanding but often critical light in the belief that such devices have often been used by interested parties and even governments to maintain social solidarity and to mould a very complex people into a coherent and obedient whole.
Australia is not and never has been an equal society. It has not always been a peaceful and tolerant society but it is more so than most other states and especially many of those sending immigrants. It is not a perfect democracy. Many have been mistreated and even persecuted but that most of those suffering at present are either indigenous or refugees should not be a cause of indifference. Australians may be suspicious of foreigners and social and political deviants. But they have passed a whole series of reforming laws since the Federation in 1901, not all of which have been as racist as the White Australia policy. An Immigrant Nation Seeks Cohesion attempts to get a little bit closer to the truth of two hundred years of creating a liveable society in what was a remote and unknown part of the world.
[This book] reminds us to keep migrant experiences central to our identity as Australians, as we are indeed a migrant nation in an ever-increasingly globalised world.
Vanessa Bible, Migrant nation: Australian culture, society and identity [Book Review] [online]. Journal of Australian Colonial History, Vol. 20, Jul 2018: 195197.
James Jupp is a visiting scholar in the School of Demography, Australian National University. Educated in the UK, Jupp moved to Australia after graduation. His doctoral dissertation has been published as Sri Lanka: Third World Democracy (1978). Jupp is the author of several books and articles, the editor of three encyclopaedias and the co-editor of six books.