The Australian Legend"This book attempts to trace the historical origins and development of the Australian legend or national mystique. It argues that a specifically Australian outlook grew up first and most clearly among the bush workers in the Australian pastoral industry, and that this group has had an influence, completely disproportionate to its numerical and economic strength, on the attitudes of the whole Australian community."--Foreword |
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Contents
THE FOUNDING FATHERS | 14 |
THE BUSHMAN COMES OF AGE | 167 |
APOTHEOSIS OF THE NOMAD TRIBE | 192 |
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A. B. Paterson Aborigines American attitude Australian national ballads Ben Hall Britain British Bulletin bullock-drivers Bush Songs bush-workers bushmen bushrangers cabbage-tree hat cattle chum collectivist colonists colony contemporary criminals Currency Lads Diemen's Land diggers diggings districts Donahoo early economic emancipists Emigrant England English ethos fact feeling free immigrants frontier Furphy Gold Rush goldfields Harris History influence interior Irish Jack John labour later less Library of Victoria living London masters mates mateship Melbourne middle-class Mundy native native-born never nineteenth century noble frontiersman noble savage nomad tribe Norfolk Island old hands outback outlook pastoral workers perhaps period Plains police political popular population prisoners Queensland sentiment Settlers and Convicts shearers shearing sheep shepherd social society South Wales squatters station swagman Sydney tended tion tradition tralia Transportation Turner typical up-country Van Diemen's Land verse Victoria W. C. Wentworth writes wrote