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Main Title: Summer in the hills : the nineteenth-century mountain resort in Australia / Andrea Inglis. Book Cover
Author: Inglis, Andrea, 1962-
Imprint: Australian Scholarly Publishing, 2007.
Collation: xxiii, 247 p. : ill., facsims, notes, bib., index, pbk ; 17 x 21 cm.
Summary: Picturesque peaks and sublime summits : the aesthetic appeals of the mountains -- Indian summers : the example of the Imperial Hill Station -- Colonial connections : the influence of the British India upon the Australian colonies -- Health and the highlands : the Hill Station as a health resort -- 'Civilized wilderness' : verdant slopes and the development of the Hill-Station garden -- High society : social life and social ritual in the australian Hill Station -- High Tide : rival resorts and altered perspectives.

The author examines the antipodal hill-stations in detail, discussing their Imperial and Anglo-Indian antecendants, and also considers the somethimes surprising variations, which manifested in the local exemplars.
Subject: Resorts
Recreation
Colonial times
Australia
ISBN: 9781740971386 (pbk.) 1740971388 (pbk.)
Notes:
Includes index.
"Andrea Scott Inglis"--Cover.
In the nineteenth century, Australia's colonial gentry made it fashionable to spend summer in the hills. Mountain resorts or hill stations - in such locations as Mount Macedon in Victoria, the Blue Mountains and Southern Highlands in New South Wales, the Adelaide Hills in South Australia and Toowoomba in Queensland - quickly attracted patrons eager to luxuriate in the cooler climate, seek out the curative mountain air, enjoy the exotic gardens or take part in the refined society which gathered there. In Summer in the Hills, Andrea Inglis examines these antipodean hill- stations in detail, discussing their Imperial and Anglo- Indian antecedents and also considering the sometimes- surprising variations, which manifested in the local exemplars. Drawing on a wealth of lively primary sources, she opens a window on to the distinctive society that developed in the hills. As well, she explores variously the role played by aesthetic values, the importance of medical opinion in defining the hill station as a health resort and the impact of the hill-station experience on colonial attitudes to the bush. Finally, her study suggests that the hill station - no less than the beach or the post-World War II ski resort - made a clear contribution to a fledgling sense of Australian national identity.
Result Collection Location Shelf No Status Notes
Non-Fiction Main Library 306.48 ING Available