Journal article
Alfred Deakin’s ‘Austral-Asia’ and the making of ‘history for the future’
D Coleman, S Nair
Journal of Language Literature and Culture | ROUTLEDGE JOURNALS, TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD | Published : 2017
Abstract
In 1893 Alfred Deakin coined the term ‘Austral-Asia’ and argued, in Irrigated India and Temple and Tomb in India, that India and its citizens were central to Australia’s future. By 1901, he was furiously defending the White Australia policy, warning Australian citizens of the threat of non-Europeans to the future of the new nation. This dramatic shift-from perceiving India as an opportunity to perceiving it as a threat-is attributable to the influence of Charles Pearson’s National Life and Character (1894) which warned of the end of white hegemony if white men began mixing with the Chinese, ‘Hindoo’ and ‘Negro’ races. Pearson’s work questioned the assumption that white men were born to rule,..
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Awarded by Australian Research Council
Funding Acknowledgements
This work has been supported by the Australian Research Council [grant number DP140102390] and the Faculty of Arts, University of Melbourne.