Full Record

Main Title: The tyranny of distance : how distance shaped Australia's history / Geoffrey Blainey. Book Cover
Author: Blainey, Geoffrey, 1930-
Imprint: Macmillan, 2001.
Collation: xiii, 413 p. : maps, pbk, ; 23 cm.
Summary: 1. Search -- 2. Exile - 3. Isolation -- 4. Limpet ports -- 5. Whalemen -- 6. Land barrier -- 7. The art of abduction -- 8. Gold clippers -- 9. Black cloud -- 10. A magician's art -- 11. Railway boom -- 12. A hollow triumph -- 13. The horseless age -- 14. Antipodes adrift -- 15. The shrinking seas -- 16. Is distance dead?

When Geoffrey first wrote the title in 1966, he coined a phrase that has become part of our language. This acclaimed work of Australian history describes how the unique factors of our size and isolation shaped Australia's past, and will continue to shape its future.

‘The tyranny of distance’ is the classic account of how Australia’s geographical remoteness has been central to shaping our history and identity – and how it will continue to form our future.

As well as being hailed as a work of enduring scholarship, ‘The tyranny of distance’ brings our history to life. Geoffrey Blainey recounts the fascinating story of Australia’s development, from Captain Cook’s bold voyages and the hardships of the early settlers, through to the challenges we face in the world today.

This revised and updated edition of ‘The tyranny of distance’ examines how distance and isolation, while tamed, have always been and will remain vital to Australia’s development, even in the twenty-first century ‘global village’.
Subject: Transport
Economic conditions
Australia
Edition: Rev. ed.
ISBN: 0732911176 :
Notes:
"21st century edition"--T.p. Includes index.
Bibliography: p. 375-396.
Result Collection Location Shelf No Status Notes
Non-Fiction Stacks 388 BLA Available