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In Australian Story, Mungo MacCallum investigates the political success of Kevin Rudd. What does he know about Australia that his opponents don’t? This is a characteristically barbed and perceptive look at the challenges facing the government and the country. MacCallum argues that the things we used to rely on are not there anymore. On the Right, the blind faith in markets has recently collapsed. The Left lost its guiding light with the demise of the socialist dream.
In entertaining fashion, MacCallum dissects the myths that made Australia: the idea of the Lucky Country, with endless pastures, a working man’s paradise, a new Britannia, and more. In newly uncertain times, MacCallum argues, Rudd has sought to tap into these myths, in the process reclaiming them from John Howard.
Australian Story is both a canny assessment of the Rudd government’s election-winning approach and a broader meditation on the nation’s core traditions at a time of major change and challenge.
“Rudd has made it clear that he is looking forward to a long time in office … If the polls are to be believed, he is still seen as the best man for the job by an overwhelming majority of Australians. But Why? What is it about this repetitive, boring, God-bothering nerd that appeals to the proverbially laid-back, cynical, disengaged public?”
Mungo Maccallum, Australian Story
Mungo MacCallum is one of Australia’s most influential political journalists. Over a career spanning more than four decades, he has worked for most of Australia’s leading newspapers and magazines and been a journalist and broadcaster for the ABC and SBS. His books include Mungo: The Man Who Laughs, How To Be a Megalomaniac and Poll Dancing: The Story of the 2007 Election.
Quarterly Essay presents significant contributions to the general debate. Each issue contains a single essay written at a length of about 25,000 words. It aims to present the widest range of political, intellectual and cultural opinion.
Contents:
1 – Australian Story: Kevin Rudd and the Lucky Country
Mungo MacCallum
69 – Is Neo-Liberalism Finished?: 2009 Quarterly Essay Lecture
Robert Manne
93 – Correspondence “Radical Hope”
Christine Nicholls, Chris Sarra, Tony Abbott, Peter Shergold, Peter Sutton, Fred Chaney, Jane Caro, Andrew Leigh, Noel Pearson
137 - Contributors
In Australian Story, Mungo MacCallum investigates the political success of Kevin Rudd. What does he know about Australia that his opponents don’t? This is a characteristically barbed and perceptive look at the challenges facing the government and the country. MacCallum argues that the things we used to rely on are not there anymore. On the Right, the blind faith in markets has recently collapsed. The Left lost its guiding light with the demise of the socialist dream.
In entertaining fashion, MacCallum dissects the myths that made Australia: the idea of the Lucky Country, with endless pastures, a working man’s paradise, a new Britannia, and more. In newly uncertain times, MacCallum argues, Rudd has sought to tap into these myths, in the process reclaiming them from John Howard.
Australian Story is both a canny assessment of the Rudd government’s election-winning approach and a broader meditation on the nation’s core traditions at a time of major change and challenge.
“Rudd has made it clear that he is looking forward to a long time in office … If the polls are to be believed, he is still seen as the best man for the job by an overwhelming majority of Australians. But Why? What is it about this repetitive, boring, God-bothering nerd that appeals to the proverbially laid-back, cynical, disengaged public?”
Mungo Maccallum, Australian Story
Mungo MacCallum is one of Australia’s most influential political journalists. Over a career spanning more than four decades, he has worked for most of Australia’s leading newspapers and magazines and been a journalist and broadcaster for the ABC and SBS. His books include Mungo: The Man Who Laughs, How To Be a Megalomaniac and Poll Dancing: The Story of the 2007 Election.
Quarterly Essay presents significant contributions to the general debate. Each issue contains a single essay written at a length of about 25,000 words. It aims to present the widest range of political, intellectual and cultural opinion.
Contents:
1 – Australian Story: Kevin Rudd and the Lucky Country
Mungo MacCallum
69 – Is Neo-Liberalism Finished?: 2009 Quarterly Essay Lecture
Robert Manne
93 – Correspondence “Radical Hope”
Christine Nicholls, Chris Sarra, Tony Abbott, Peter Shergold, Peter Sutton, Fred Chaney, Jane Caro, Andrew Leigh, Noel Pearson
137 - Contributors
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