Author(s) |
Wise, Nathan
|
Publication Date |
2018-01-01
|
Abstract |
Throughout the mid-to-late nineteenth century the British Empire rapidly
expanded across the world, all too often bringing settlers and the British Army
(and associated colonial forces) into conflict with indigenous peoples and other
world powers. Within the Australian colonies, as that Empire expanded and
conflict spread, a network of newspapers simultaneously worked to report on that
conflict and make sense of it for their readership. In the long term, the nature of
that reporting reinforced and consolidated settler sentiment and helped bind
members of the colonies to a global imperial identity unified, to some extent, by
common sentiments and attitudes. Those reports, and their impact on Australian
colonial values and ideals, are the focus of Sam Hutchinson's Settlers, War, and
Empire in the Press. As Hutchison notes, newspapers helped people 'make sense of
their world' (p. 6) and they thus provide scholars with a great opportunity to
assess ideas of Empire and identity, among other values and ideals, that were held
by settlers at the time.
|
Citation |
Journal of Australian Colonial History, v.20, p. 182-183
|
ISSN |
1441-0370
|
Link | |
Language |
en
|
Publisher |
University of New England, School of Humanities
|
Title |
Settlers, War, and Empire in the Press: Unsettling News in Australia and Britain, 1863-1902 [Book review]
|
Type of document |
Review
|
Entity Type |
Publication
|
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