Volume 1 of The Cambridge History of Australia explores Australia's history from ancient times through to Federation in 1901. It begins with an archaeological examination of the continent's Indigenous history, which dates back 50,000 years. This volume examines the first European encounters with Australia and its Indigenous people, and the subsequent colonisation of the land by the British in the late eighteenth century, providing insight into the realities of a convict society and how this shaped the nation's development. Part I traces the dynamic growth in Australia's economy, demography and industry throughout the nineteenth century, as it moved towards a system of liberal democracy and one of the most defining events in its history: the Federation of the colonies in 1901. Part II offers a deeper investigation of key topics, such as relations between Indigenous people and settlers, and Australia's colonial identity. It also covers the economy, science and technology, law and literature.
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'Rich in depth, historiography and detail, these volumes will become the backbone of Australian history for a new generation.' History Today
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Volume 1 of The Cambridge History of Australia explores Australia's history from ancient times through to Federation in 1901.
Volume
1. Indigenous and Colonial Australia: Part I:
1. The last 50,000
years: an archaeological view Peter Veth and Susan O'Connor;
2. Newcomers,
c.16001800 Shino Konishi and Maria Nugent;
3. Convict transportation in
global context, c.170088 Emma Christopher and Hamish Maxwell-Stewart;
4. The
early colonial presence, 17881822 Grace Karskens;
5. Expansion, 182050 Lisa
Ford and David Andrew Roberts;
6. The advent of self-government, 1840s1890
Ann Curthoys and Jessie Mitchell;
7. The gold rushes of the 1850s David
Goodman;
8. Colonial states and civil society, 186090 Stuart Macintyre and
Sean Scalmer;
9. Rethinking the 1890s Melissa Bellanta;
10. Making the
Federal Commonwealth, 18901901 Helen Irving; Part II:
11. Population and
health Janet McCalman and Rebecca Kippen;
12. Environmental transformations
Andrea Gaynor;
13. The economy Lionel Frost;
14. Indigenous and settler
relations Tracey Banivanua Mar and Penelope Edmonds;
15. Education Julia
Horne and Geoffrey Sherington;
16. Law and regulation Mark Finnane;
17.
Religion Anne O'Brien;
18. Science and technology John Gascoigne and Sara
Maroske;
19. Gender and colonial society Penny Russell;
20. Art and
literature: a cosmopolitan culture Robert Dixon and Jeanette Hoorn;
21.
Empire: Australia and 'Greater Britain', 17881901 Deryck Schreuder;
22.
Colonial Australia and the Asia-Pacific region Marilyn Lake;
23. Australian
colonies in a maritime world Cindy McCreery and Kirsten McKenzie.