The Magazine Spring 2012

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

The Magazine Spring 2012 Army Museum of Western Australia the magazine Artillery Barracks Burt Street, Fremantle, WA 6160 Phone: (08) 9430 2535 Email: [email protected] Open 11 am - 4 pm Fax: (08) 9430 2519 Web: www.armymuseumwa.com.au Wednesday - Sunday Spring 2012 A “feather in the cap” as AMWA uniforms WhoWho isis he?he? help Banksia Hill Detention Centre win a national award for ANZAC Day project e’s a trombone soloist who can Hblow two notes, simultaneously, an octave apart. saxophonist who knows a Athing or two about improvisation. hey say winners are grinners and Tmuseum volunteer Valma Hanson IINN TTHHIISS EEDITION (pictured above in the museum hire store) certainly proves that. AMWA’s “Sneaky Valma, who supervises the loan and Pete” - Page 6 hire of museum uniforms and equipment, organised the loan of a Funding and range of uniforms for a group of young planning update for residents of the Banksia Hill Detention new galleries - Centre, who compiled a national award- Page 2 winning ANZAC Day project. Valma says she feels the award A friendly motorised nd a pianist who can boogie represented “a feather in the cap” for with the best. Who is this the museum and her role in the project. “invasion” on the A multi-talented musician? Find out For the full story and pictures, go to parade ground - on Page 3. Page 5. Page 4 LotteryWest agrees to fund WORLD WAR TWO Military + Morrison = Musical Magic redevelopment of four GALLERY ALMOST museum galleries READY TO OPEN ustralia’s best-known trumpet he curatorial fitout of the new Avirtuoso, James Morrison, and TWorld War 2 Gallery started on the Australian Army Band, Perth, he AMWA Foundation Board September 1, in readiness for the teamed up to present a memorable has announced the go ahead for By official opening by His Excellency concert at the Perth Concert Hall - a T fund-raiser for the Army Museum of the final stage of the gallery George Sulc Malcolm McCusker AC, CVO, QC, redevelopment program. The Chairman Governor of Western Australia, Western Australia Foundation. museum has been successful in AMWA scheduled for 15 October. James proved to be not only our obtaining the necessary funding to Foundation The World War Two Gallery is Phase foremost trumpeter, but showed his complete this exciting project. Two of a comprehensive multi-skilling ability, performing on Advice has been received from redevelopment of the Museum's the saxophone, trombone and grand Lotterywest that our request for a BKDESIG,N who also developed the galleries first initiated by the Army piano , as well as a stand-up grant to complete the redevelopment Post 1945 gallery and are in the Museum of Western Australia comedian, displaying a keen sense of of the WWI, Colonial, POW and process of completing the WW2 Foundation in 2009. humour and timing in his delivery. Heraldry galleries has been granted. gallery. The redevelopment program has been The total sum of $548,000 has been The new WW2 Gallery is scheduled made possible through fundraising by made available for this project. The to officially open on 15 October 2012. the Foundation, generous public contract is in the process of being Credit for this achievement must go to donations and ongoing support from finalized with the successful tenderer all members of the Board and to our LotteryWest. Phase One, the Post patrons, who together put forward a 1945 Gallery, opened in August 2010 convincing case to LotteryWest and the Entrance Gallery and Shop Army Museum of Western officials during the March 2012 funded by the Foundation and Army Australia Foundation briefing. Well done to all of those opened in early 2011. involved! Management Planning for Phase 3, the World War Admiral visits AMWA One, Prisoners of War, Heraldry and Also I report on the recent visit of Museum Manager Colonial Galleries, is already well Rear Admiral Doolan (retired). The advanced. Lotterywest funding has Major Henry Fijolek Admiral is the National President of Museum Assistant Manager been secured, Foundation funding is the RSL as well as being on the in place, the scope of works Army Band vocalist Cpl Mark Underwood Captain Wayne Gardiner committee which is organizing the Museum Curator developed and contracts are being (above), accompanied by James Morrison. centennial commemorations of WWI. Right, pipers from the Australian Army Band Mr Robert Mitchell finalised. He also sits on the board of the AWM. When completed in 2014, the entire Pipes and Drums. Admiral Doolan had not visited the AMWA Foundation Board program will be the largest museum before but stated that he was undertaken by a Regional Museum in Chairman most impressed with the museum and Mr George Sulc the Australian Army History Unit and the progress being made in the the largest volunteer-based Museum Deputy Chairman redevelopment of the galleries. Mr Ken Walker redevelopment in Australia in recent He will keep us informed on the times. Treasurer arrangements being made for Mr Alan Jennings The World War Two Gallery remains commemorative activities being consistent with the overall corporate Directors planned in Western Australia. style of the Army Museum but will Mrs Carole Temple While we are aware that much of the have a distinctly different feel to the Mr Tom Goode focus of these activities in Western open and modern feeling of the Post Mr Bob Coventry Australia will be on Albany, the point 1945 Gallery. Entry will be through a Mr Ian Menzies was made to him that much of the transitional domestic kitchen space to Company Secretary: departures for and return from WWI position the visitor in 1939. Mrs Dale Olson of servicemen and women occurred A newspaper lined orientation hall through the Port of Fremantle, which will then introduce the Gallery. Editor, The Magazine should not be forgotten in any The ferocity of the fighting, the threat Graeme Hunt commemorations. of bombardment and air attack and With the foundation’s annual meeting the short range fighting in the African Please send all letters, contributions and on September 23, the board and Pacific theatres will hopefully be suggestions to the editor, Graeme Hunt.email: membership is now: conveyed through a more contained [email protected] and closed in feeling in the main The Australian Army Band Perth ensemble, directed by the CO, Capt. Steve Cottier, with vocalists from Gallery areas. (Continued Page 7) the band and young dancers from Dynamic Performing Arts. The concert generated $14,000 for the Page 3 Page 2 Army Museum of WA. LotteryWest agrees to fund WORLD WAR TWO Military + Morrison = Musical Magic redevelopment of four GALLERY ALMOST museum galleries READY TO OPEN ustralia’s best-known trumpet he curatorial fitout of the new Avirtuoso, James Morrison, and TWorld War 2 Gallery started on the Australian Army Band, Perth, he AMWA Foundation Board September 1, in readiness for the teamed up to present a memorable has announced the go ahead for By official opening by His Excellency concert at the Perth Concert Hall - a T fund-raiser for the Army Museum of the final stage of the gallery George Sulc Malcolm McCusker AC, CVO, QC, redevelopment program. The Chairman Governor of Western Australia, Western Australia Foundation. museum has been successful in AMWA scheduled for 15 October. James proved to be not only our obtaining the necessary funding to Foundation The World War Two Gallery is Phase foremost trumpeter, but showed his complete this exciting project. Two of a comprehensive multi-skilling ability, performing on Advice has been received from redevelopment of the Museum's the saxophone, trombone and grand Lotterywest that our request for a BKDESIG,N who also developed the galleries first initiated by the Army piano , as well as a stand-up grant to complete the redevelopment Post 1945 gallery and are in the Museum of Western Australia comedian, displaying a keen sense of of the WWI, Colonial, POW and process of completing the WW2 Foundation in 2009. humour and timing in his delivery. Heraldry galleries has been granted. gallery. The redevelopment program has been The total sum of $548,000 has been The new WW2 Gallery is scheduled made possible through fundraising by made available for this project. The to officially open on 15 October 2012. the Foundation, generous public contract is in the process of being Credit for this achievement must go to donations and ongoing support from finalized with the successful tenderer all members of the Board and to our LotteryWest. Phase One, the Post patrons, who together put forward a 1945 Gallery, opened in August 2010 convincing case to LotteryWest and the Entrance Gallery and Shop Army Museum of Western officials during the March 2012 funded by the Foundation and Army Australia Foundation briefing. Well done to all of those opened in early 2011. involved! Management Planning for Phase 3, the World War Admiral visits AMWA One, Prisoners of War, Heraldry and Also I report on the recent visit of Museum Manager Colonial Galleries, is already well Rear Admiral Doolan (retired). The advanced. Lotterywest funding has Major Henry Fijolek Admiral is the National President of Museum Assistant Manager been secured, Foundation funding is the RSL as well as being on the in place, the scope of works Army Band vocalist Cpl Mark Underwood Captain Wayne Gardiner committee which is organizing the Museum Curator developed and contracts are being (above), accompanied by James Morrison. centennial commemorations of WWI. Right, pipers from the Australian Army Band Mr Robert Mitchell finalised. He also sits on the board of the AWM. When completed in 2014, the entire Pipes and Drums. Admiral Doolan had not visited the AMWA Foundation Board program will be the largest museum before but stated that he was undertaken by a Regional Museum in Chairman most impressed with the museum and Mr George Sulc the Australian Army History Unit and the progress being made in the the largest volunteer-based Museum Deputy Chairman redevelopment of the galleries.
Recommended publications
  • 1 Army in the 21 Century and Restructuring the Army: A
    Army in the 21st Century and Restructuring the Army: A Retrospective Appraisal of Australian Military Change Management in the 1990s Renée Louise Kidson July 2016 A sub-thesis submitted for the degree of Master of Military and Defence Studies (Advanced) of The Australian National University © Copyright by Renée Louise Kidson 2016 All Rights Reserved 1 Declaration This sub-thesis is my own original work. I declare no part of this work has been: • copied from any other person's work except where due acknowledgement is made in the text; written by any other person; or • submitted for assessment in another course. The sub-thesis word count is 16,483 excluding Table of Contents, Annexes and Chapter 2 (Literature Review and Methods, a separate assessment under the MMDS(Adv) program). Renee Kidson Acknowledgements I owe my greatest thanks to my supervisors: Dr John Blaxland (ANU) and Colonel David Connery (Australian Army History Unit, AAHU), for wise counsel, patience and encouragement. Dr Roger Lee (Head, AAHU) provided funding support; and, crucially, a rigorous declassification process to make select material available for this work. Lieutenant Colonel Bill Houston gave up entire weekends to provide my access to secure archival vault facilities. Meegan Ablett and the team at the Australian Defence College Vale Green Library provided extensive bibliographic support over three years. Thanks are also extended to my interviewees: for the generosity of their time; the frankness of their views; their trust in disclosing materially relevant details to me; and for providing me with perhaps the finest military education of all – insights to the decision-making processes of senior leaders: military and civilian.
    [Show full text]
  • Reflections and Observations
    Chapter 12 Reflections and Observations Reflections In November 1999, senior Australian Defence Force (ADF) officers and Defence officials reflected on pre-deployment preparation, deployment and initial INTERFET operations.1 The major issues were command and control and the performance of the ADF logistic system. From the perspective of command and control, the consensus was that ad hoc and secretive planning processes and a late change to command and control arrangements were unhelpful. There was a call for a review of the role of Headquarters Australian Theatre (HQ AST) and criticism of the uneven flow of information from the Strategic Command Group (SCG). There were also criticisms of intelligence collection and evaluation. One Service chief commented that the Defence Intelligence Organisation (DIO) only offered `classified news' readily available in the media and that the `intelligence requirements of the SCG had never been communicated to DIO'.2 There was evidence that logistic and communications staff functions at Australian Defence Headquarters (ADHQ) were dysfunctional. Staff capability and crisis management structures, as well as communications and information security within Defence and from Defence to other Government departments, proved unsatisfactory.3 One report commented that `the transition from a foreign policy crisis to a whole of Government crisis was not well handled and Defence's lead role in managing a peace enforcement operation was not recognised by other departments'.4 On 24 November 1999, Air Vice Marshal Bob Treloar submitted a report on Theatre Command for higher level consideration.5 He affirmed that Theatre Command was working well and would work even better when component commanders were collocated in one building, `a logical outcome of current ADF capability evolution.
    [Show full text]
  • Download Australian Army Journal 2007 3
    Volume IV, Number 3 Summer 2007 Th e Australian Army Journal is published by authority of the Chief of Army Lieutenant General Peter Leahy, AC Th e Australian Army Journal is sponsored by: Director, Land Warfare Studies Centre © Commonwealth of Australia 2007 Th is journal is copyright. Apart from any fair dealing for the purpose of study, research, criticism or review (as permitted under the Copyright Act 1968), and with standard source credit included, no part may be reproduced by any process without written permission. Inquiries should be directed to the Director, Land Warfare Studies Centre, Geddes Building, Ian Campbell Road, Duntroon ACT 2600. Contributors are urged to ensure the accuracy of the information contained in their articles; the Editorial Advisory Board accepts no responsibility for errors of fact. Permission to reprint AAJ articles will generally be given by the Editor aft er consultation with the author(s). Any reproduced articles must bear an acknowledgment of source. Th e views expressed in the Australian Army Journal are the contributors’ and not necessarily those of the Australian Army or the Department of Defence. Th e Commonwealth of Australia will not be legally responsible in contract, tort or otherwise for any statement made in this journal. ISSN 1448-2843 Th e Australian Army Journal Staff : Publisher: Lieutenant Colonel Malcolm McGregor Editor: Mr Scott Hopkins Research Editor: Ms Natalia Forrest Editorial Advisory Board: Dr Robert Ayson LTGEN John Coates, AC, MBE (Retd) BRIG John Essex-Clark, DSM (Retd) Prof. Jeff rey Grey MAJGEN John Hartley, AO (Retd) Mr Roger Lee Dr Peter Londey Mrs Catherine McCullagh MAJGEN Michael O’Brien, CSC (Retd) LTGEN Laurie O’Donnell, AC (Retd) Dr Albert Palazzo A/Prof.
    [Show full text]
  • Projection to East Timor
    Chapter 11 Projection to East Timor In August 1942 in New Guinea during the Second World War and in 1966 in Vietnam an accumulation of risks resulted in a small number of Australian troops facing several thousand well-equipped, well-trained and more experienced enemy troops. Fortunately, climate, terrain and the resilience of junior leaders and small teams, as well as effective artillery support in 1966, offset the numerical and tactical superiority of their opponents. Australian troops prevailed against the odds. If either of these two tactical tipping points had gone the other way, there would have been severe strategic embarrassment for Australia. There could have been public pressure for a change in Government and investigations into the competence of the Australian armed forces. For 48 hours in September 1999, renegade members of the Indonesian military forces and their East Timorese auxiliaries provoked members of an Australian vanguard of the International ForceÐEast Timor (INTERFET) in the streets of the East Timor capital, Dili. Indonesians outnumbered Australians, who carried only limited quantities of ammunition.1 On the night of 21 September, a 600-strong East Timorese territorial battalion confronted a 40-strong Australian vehicle checkpoint on Dili's main road. Good luck, superior night-fighting technology, the presence of armoured vehicles and discipline under pressure resulted in another historic tactical tipping point going Australia's way. Had there been an exchange of fire that night, there would have been heavy casualties on both sides and several hours of confused fighting between Australian, Indonesian and East Timorese territorial troops. There was also potential for Indonesian and Australian naval vessels to have clashed as Australian ships rushed to deliver ammunition to Australian troops, as well as for Australian transport aircraft and helicopters to have been attacked at Dili airport.
    [Show full text]
  • Communication, Cultural and Media Studies: the Key Concepts
    COMMUNICATION, CULTURAL AND MEDIA STUDIES: THE KEY CONCEPTS This book provides a topical and authoritative guide to Communica- tion, Cultural and Media Studies. It brings together in an accessible form some of the most important concepts that you will need, and shows how they have been - or might be - used. This third edition of the classic text Key Concepts in Communication and Cultural Studies forms an up-to-date, multi-disciplinary explanation and assessment of the key concepts and new terms that you will encounter in your studies, from `anti-globalisation' to `reality TV', from `celebrity' to `tech-wreck'. This new edition includes: . Over 70 new entries, . Most entries revised, rewritten and updated, . Coverage of recent developments in the field, . Coverage of new interactive media and the `new economy', . An extensive bibliography to aid further study. John Hartley is Professor and Dean of the Creative Industries Faculty at Queensland University of Technology, Australia. He is author of many books and articles on television, journalism and cultural studies. His mostrecentbooks are: Popular Reality (1996), Uses of Television (1999), The Indigenous Public Sphere, with Alan McKee (2000), American Cultural Studies: A Reader, edited with Roberta E. Pearson (2000) and A Short History of Cultural Studies (2003). ROUTLEDGE KEY GUIDES Routledge Key Guides are accessible, informative and lucid handbooks, which define and discuss the central concepts, thinkers and debates in a broad range of academic disciplines. All are written by noted experts in their respective subjects. Clear, concise exposition of complex and stimulating issues and ideas make Routledge Key Guides the ultimate reference resources for students, teachers, researchers and the interested lay person.
    [Show full text]
  • Not Just Met John Hartley
    This article, by permission of the copyright holders, is from ‘Not Just Chalk and Talk, Stories of Schoolies in the Royal Navy,’ Published in 2013 (ISBN 978 1902838 52 6) Not Just Met John Hartley I joined Antrim, a guided missile destroyer, in my first sea appointment as a Lieutenant Commander in early 1973. Fresh from Met course and with little forecasting experience, a six-month Far East deployment was a challenging and exhilarating undertaking. However the port visits were exceptional: Mombasa, Port Sudan, Massawa (for Haile Selassie's last birthday), Jeddah, Gan, Singapore, Thailand, South Korea, Japan and Hong Kong; then home via Mauritius, Beira patrol and the Cape. HMS Antrim – one of four Mark 2 County class guided missile destroyers by permission of Navy News (MOD) The weather in the South China Sea was appalling with three typhoons in July and two of these, close together, meant our having to sail from Hong Kong. As a department of one officer and one leading hand, such incidents made for hard work and long hours on the bridge as we had no ships in company. The sight of ocean-going Japanese tugs poised as the Glomar Challenger drilling rig dragged her anchors in the Taiwan Strait will stay with me forever. In a ship the size of a guided missile destroyer many extraneous lurks come your way: Confidential Books Officer, Flight Deck Officer, prisoner interrogation team leader, oh, and of course education and resettlement. Balmy nights on the flight deck in the Indian Ocean at flying stations contrast with recovering the helicopter at anchor in Mauritius with the aircraft facing aft, with me in the flight deck netting and the tail rotor inches from the hanger bulkhead; hours spent page-by-page mustering books of dubious value were followed by dashes ashore with bags of classified paper to burn conscientiously in the nearest large incinerator; time spent with the Master-at-Arms practicing interrogation techniques and trying to get information from captured enemies in exercises, alternated with watches in the Ops Room writing the diary.
    [Show full text]
  • Supplement to the London Gazette, Srd June 1972 6261
    SUPPLEMENT TO THE LONDON GAZETTE, SRD JUNE 1972 6261 Major (Director of Music) Harold William M.B.E. VINCE (474509), 5th Royal Inniskilling Dragoon Guards, now Retired. To be Ordinary Members of the Military 22326179 Warrant Officer Class II William Division of the said Most Excellent Order: Charles George WALL, Royal Corps of Squadron Leader Stanley ARNOLD (197514), Signals. Royal Air Force Regiment. Major Robert William WARD (443583), Squadron Leader Victor Caradoc ARTHUR 1st The Queen's Dragoon Guards. (49342), Royal Air Force. Major David Angus WIGHTON (422854), Squadron Leader Regin'ald Harry CRUMPTON Royal Regiment of Artillery (Territorial and (4083101), Royal Air Force. Army Volunteer Reserve). Squadron Leader Edward Philip FOLLAND Lieutenant-Colonel (Acting) (N.M.) Kenneth (503723), Royal Air Force. WILSON (463742), Royal Army Medical Squadron Leader Ian HALL (4230255), Royal Corps. Air Force. Major William John Neville WOOD (424144), Squadron Leader John HARTLEY (572117), Corps of Royal Military Police. Royal Air Force. Squadron Leader Alan Guy CUNNINGHAM- OVERSEAS AWARD HILL (503493), Royal Air Force. O.B.E. Squadron Leader Douglas HOPTON (949221), Royal Air Force. To be an Ordinary Officer of the Military Squadron Leader John Vernon LOBLEY Division of the said Most Excellent Order: (4230153), Royal Air Force. Lieutenant-Colonel John Joseph PORRAL, E.D., Squadron Leader John Henry PROCTER Officer Commanding, The Gibraltar Regiment. (506464), Royal Air Force. Squadron Leader Douglas William SAMUEL MINISTRY OF DEFENCE (AiR FORCE (569286), Royal Air Force. DEPARTMENT) Squadron Leader Graham Adrian SMART C.B.E. (3519697), Royal Air Force. Squadron' Leader John Victor TAYLOR To be Ordinary Commanders of the Military (1624472), Royal Air Force.
    [Show full text]
  • A History of Australia's Defence White Papers
    RESEARCH PAPER SERIES, 2015–16 20 AUGUST 2015 Defending Australia: a history of Australia’s defence white papers Nicole Brangwin, Nathan Church, Steve Dyer and David Watt Foreign Affairs, Defence and Security Section Executive summary • Australia published defence white papers in 1976, 1987, 1994, 2000, 2009 and 2013 and a new white paper is expected in 2015. • A community consultation process was undertaken as part of the 2000 and 2009 defence white papers and a similar process is being carried out for the upcoming 2015 defence white paper. • The need to defend Australia against a major aggressor remains the primary driver in Australian defence policy. • Regional security and contributing to the global order have been secondary, but still important priorities in Australian defence planning. • Each of the defence white papers has been created on the basis that Australia should be able to defend itself against a potential aggressor without outside assistance (the principle of self-reliance), while at the same time stressing the importance of the alliance with the United States. • Threat perceptions have changed from the Cold War influences reflected in the 1976 and 1987 white papers to a contemporary focus on terrorism while also incorporating emerging threats such as cyber attacks and the rise of China. • Defence white papers are not produced in a vacuum but are informed by key reviews of Australia’s strategic situation, industry policy and force posture. • Defence policy is subject to the broader economic conditions of the time and the Department of Defence must contend with many other priorities for government funding. • The financial plans set out in the various defence white papers are often ambitious and rarely brought to fruition.
    [Show full text]
  • SENATE Official Committee Hansard
    COMMONWEALTH OF AUSTRALIA PARLIAMENTARY DEBATES SENATE Official Committee Hansard FOREIGN AFFAIRS, DEFENCE AND TRADE LEGISLATION COMMITTEE (Consideration of Estimates) TUESDAY, 17 JUNE 1997 BY AUTHORITY OF THE SENATE CANBERRA 1997 CONTENTS TUESDAY, 17 JUNE Department of Defence— Program 4—Air Force ................................. 573 Program 5—Intelligence ................................ 574 Program 8—Defence personnel executive .................... 580 Program 10—Science and technology ....................... 617 Program 11—Defence estate ............................. 623 Program 12—Corporate information ........................ 632 Program 13—Corporate support ........................... 632 Tuesday, 17 June 1997 SENATE—Legislation FAD&T 571 SENATE Tuesday, 17 June 1997 FOREIGN AFFAIRS, DEFENCE AND TRADE LEGISLATION COMMITTEE Portfolios: Foreign Affairs and Trade; Defence (including Veterans’ Affairs) Members: Senator Troeth (Chair), Senators Bourne, Cook, Eggleston, Ferris and Hogg Participating members: Senators Abetz, Bolkus, Brown, Brownhill, Calvert, Colston, Faulkner, Forshaw, Harradine, Margetts, Murphy, Neal, Ray, Schacht and West The Committee met at 7.32 p.m. DEPARTMENT OF DEFENCE Proposed expenditure, $10,937,163,000 (Document A). Consideration resumed from 12 June 1997. In Attendance Senator Newman, Minister for Social Security Defence Headquarters Vice Admiral Chris Barrie, Vice Chief of the Defence Force Rear Admiral David Campbell, Head, Strategic Logistics (designate) Major General Peter Abigail, Assistant Chief of
    [Show full text]
  • Struggling for Self Reliance
    STRUGGLING FOR SELF RELIANCE Four case studies of Australian Regional Force Projection in the late 1980s and the 1990s STRUGGLING FOR SELF RELIANCE Four case studies of Australian Regional Force Projection in the late 1980s and the 1990s BOB BREEN Published by ANU E Press The Australian National University Canberra ACT 0200, Australia Email: [email protected] This title is also available online at: http://epress.anu.edu.au/sfsr_citation.html National Library of Australia Cataloguing-in-Publication entry Author: Breen, Bob. Title: Struggling for self reliance : four case studies of Australian regional force projection in the late 1980s and the 1990s / Bob Breen. ISBN: 9781921536083 (pbk.) 9781921536090 (online) Series: Canberra papers on strategy and defence ; 171 Notes: Bibliography. Subjects: Australia--Armed Forces. National security--Australia. Australia--Defenses--Case studies. Dewey Number: 355.033294 All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying or otherwise, without the prior permission of the publisher. The Canberra Papers on Strategy and Defence series is a collection of publications arising principally from research undertaken at the SDSC. Canberra Papers have been peer reviewed since 2006. All Canberra Papers are available for sale: visit the SDSC website at <http://rspas. anu.edu.au/sdsc/canberra_papers.php> for abstracts and prices. Electronic copies (in pdf format) of most SDSC Working Papers published since 2002 may be downloaded for free from the SDSC website at <http://rspas.anu.edu.au/sdsc/working_papers.php>. The entire Working Papers series is also available on a ‘print on demand’ basis.
    [Show full text]
  • Making 'Good Australians' : the Work of Three South Australian Educators
    o ttl eI î-1- 1l MAKING'GOOD AUSTRALIANS' : THE WORK OF THREE SOUTH AUSTRALIAN EDUCATORS bv Elizabeth Havdon Kwan gÁ (Hons), Dip Éd (Adel) Thesìs submitted for the Master of Arts degree Department of History, University of Adelaide, May 1981. i .GOOD MAKING AUSTRALIANS.: THE WORK OF THREE SOUTH AUSTRALIAN EDUCATORS CONTENTS Pag e Contents i Suntnary ii Acknowl edgements vi Abbreviations vii Il lustrations viii I NTRODUCT I ON I PART I UNCERTAINTY 1852-1901: C0L0NIALS 0R GREATER BRITONS? l3 Chapter I The Problem is Recognized: John Hartley's Dilemma 16 PART II INNOVATION IN NATION BUILDING I9O2-I9I3: AUSTRALIAN NATIONALISTS AND IMPIRiAL PATRIOTS 56 Chapter I I George Henderson and Universi ty Research 59 Chapter III Alfred Williams and the State School Curriculum 89 Chapter IV Bertie Roach and the Children of South Australia l38 PART III UNCERTAINTY AND STAGNATI()N I914-I939: .l94 BRITONS IN A BRITISH EMPIRE Chapter V The Triumph of British Sent iment ì98 CONCLUSION 262 BI BL I OGRAPHY 267 't 'l SUMMARY This thesis began in response to two questions. blhat were children in South Australian state primary schools taught about Austral ia and themsel ves? In part'icul ar, when were they he'lped to understand that Australia was their country and that they were part of an Australian nation? Preliminary work further refined the questions. Why was it not until 1906 that the South Australian Education Department made a concerted effort to adapt the essentially Eng'lish curriculum to Australian circumstances, so helping ch'ildren to make Austra,lia central to their ideas of country and nation? What does this indicate about the nature of the patriotism and nationalism experienced by Australians, a subject of considerable debate among hi stori ans? As the Introduction expìains, investigation of these questions draws on three inter-related areas of research: the history of education, Australian history and Australian historiography.
    [Show full text]
  • A Trojan Horse in the Citadel of Stories? John Hartley1
    http://doi.org/10.5334/csci.58 A Trojan Horse in the Citadel of Stories? Storytelling and the Creation of the Polity – From Göbekli Tepe to Gallipoli. John Hartley1 Curtin University, Australia and Cardiff University, Wales ABSTRACT Digital storytelling is an international movement for self-representation and advocacy, especially in educational, arts, and therapeutic communities. It has begun to attract a significant body of scholarship including publications and conferences. Australia has been an important player in all of these developments. In this presentation I explore some of the issues that have emerged for activists and scholars, including the problem of how to ‘scale up’ from self-expression to communication (i.e. self-marketing), and the question of the role that stories play in constituting ‘we’-communities (or ‘demes’). The paper pursues the relationship between storytelling and political narrative over the extreme long term (longue durée), using well known and lesser-known connections between Australia and Turkey to tell the tale. It considers how digital self-representation intersects with that political process, and what activists need to know in order to intervene more effectively. The paper is in five parts: (1) Gevinson; (2) Gallipoli; (3) Granddad; (4) Göbekli Tepe; (5) Gotcha? It seeks to place digital storytelling within a larger framework that links storytelling with the evolution of the polity. The analysis ultimately points to a looming problem for the digital storytelling movement – and possibly for human socio-cultural evolution too. In the crisis of ‘we’ communities that arises with the possibility of a globally networked polity, we need new guides to storytelling action, not the old (Trojan) warhorses of mainstream media.
    [Show full text]