Praise for The Idea of Australia
A penetrating analysis, and a valuable contribution to the debate over what Australia is, once was, and might yet become. Melissa Lucashenko, Miles Franklin Awardwinning author of Too Much Lip
Inevitably, The Idea of Australiawill draw comparisons with The Lucky Countrya similarly timely, urgent and skilful reading of an Australian moment. Julianne Schultz brings a lifetime as scholar, editor, academic and arts leader to her analysis. The result is subtle, powerful and compellinga book which demands attention, and rewards with a singular vision of the people we have become. Professor Glyn Davis AC, author of On Lifes Lottery
As Australia lurches into a deeply uncertain and ill-defined future retarded by leaders whove forgotten how to lead, Julianne Schultz reflects on how we might shake off our fears, our mediocrity and our moral torpor, and rediscover the country we once promised to be. Kerry OBrien, author of Keating
An unflinching look at the contradictory myths and realities that make up the idea of this country. Schultz has written a book that is timely, bracing, and ultimately hopeful. Yassmin Abdel-Magied, author of Yassmins Story
The Idea of Australiais a triumph of art, politics, literature, history, and the deepest scholarship. Grand themes of dispossession, exclusion, equality, fairness, culture, media and the incurable flaw at the heart of our nation, interspersed with vignettes of personal reflection spring-boarding through a formidable sweep of history.
This is a book that sparkles with curiosity, self-reflection, and sophistication, a riveting journey through the uncertain terrain of the idea of a nation.
Julianne Schultz takes us into the darkest corners of a history we would rather forget and a history we thought we knew, always with hope for the better place we can become. History as a way of imagining the future. A towering achievement. Professor Jenny Hocking, author of The Palace Letters
Disruptive, bold and brilliant, The Idea of Australiais a work of masterful synthesis, intimate reflection and stunning vision. Schultz sees not what she wants to see, but what was there all along: a nation full of promise and heartache, ambition and self-defeat. The germ of truth and reason is there, if only we can find the courage to grow it. Professor Clare Wright OAM, Stella Prizewinning author of The Forgotten Rebels of Eureka
A cerebral Who Do You Think You Are?for a nation, inviting reflection and inciting action. A contemporary classic in the making. Associate Professor Christine Wallace, author of How to Win an Election
This vast and generous book shows the full beauty and possibility of the practice of paying attentionacross all levels of life from the personal to the political. Its the result of asking how and why, of exploration and navigation, of connecting dots, and of insisting that the place thats now called Australia canand mustbe more than it has yet become.
The magnificent achievement of a magnificent and curious mind, this is a callmade with warmth, urgency and sparkling eruditionfor what Julianne herself describes as a response richer with courage and imagination than we have become accustomed to.
Its a demonstration of the best kind of imaginative leadership, the broadest understanding of this nations mental, emotional and mythological ecosystemsand their extraordinary potentialand the mighty scope of critical thinking available to someone whos stood at the centre of national conversations and thought-leadership throughout a unique and impressive career.
Julianne both thinks and cares about this country: shes passionate about justice, equality, democracy, creativity, integrity and change; the ways that these things intersect; the ways they can be transformative and transformed. She is one of this countrys most nuanced thinkers, not only dealing in but demanding complexity, lateral thinking, and always with an eye to the biggest of big pictures. The depth and breadth of her knowledge and inquiry has always felt two steps ahead of almost anyone elses as she has tackledand livedthe ongoing work of understanding how and why we have the Australia we have now; its betrayals, its blindsides, its opportunities.
Above all, this is a personal and passionate account that does its readers the courtesy of trusting their intelligence and curiosity through the richness of both on the page. Dr Ashley Hay, author of A Hundred Small Lessons
Schultz, using the metaphor of the COVID X-ray, distils many occasions in our history from opaque to light revealing the good, bad and ugly of who we are as a nation. As we struggle through a global pandemic, we have choices
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