A Time For War
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A Time For War
Bestselling author John Birmingham delves into our new military myths. Why has Anzac Day returned and Vietnam faded? Why do we love war stories again? What does this mean for the troops on the ground?
In A Time for War- Australia as a Military Power, John Birmingham ponders the Australian way of war.
In A Time For War: Australia as a Military Power, John Birmingham ponders the Australian way of war.
After East Timor and Bali, a combination of primal fear and primal ambition has transformed attitudes to our region, to security, and to war as an instrument of politics. Australian defence policy has become more assertive, and our armed forces are being radically restructured and hardened. Australia now has the capacity, and even the will, to act as a military power in its region.
A Time For War begins with a gripping account of Operation Anaconda, the 2002 battle in Afghanistan to which Australian special forces made a crucial contribution. Birmingham also looks at our war dreamingβthe sanctification of Anzac Day and the eclipse of the Vietnam Syndrome. Ranging from Sir John Monash to Peter Cosgrove, from Rudyard Kipling to The One Day of the Year, he finds that our armed forces can now do no wrong, and that politicians have taken note. The new militarism is not simply a response to September 11, he arguesβit marks a deeper shift in the culture.
"It being an RSL, we would stand each night at six o'clock for the prayer of remembrance. It was always a moving occasion, a strange suspended moment when the pokies and racing channel, the piped music and the drunken bullshitting all fell away... Friends from overseas who witnessed the quiet ceremony never failed to be impressed. One, a poet from Czechoslovakia, had always thought Australians to be a shallow, soulless, materialistic people, but she changed her mind after her first experience of the ode to the fallen among the half-empty schooners and chip packets." βJohn Birmingham, A Time For War
This issue also contains correspondence discussing Quarterly Essay 19, Relaxed & Comfortable, from David Kemp, Graham Richardson, David Corlett, Don Aitkin, Ian Marsh, Matthew Sharpe, and Judith Brett.
Book Details
INFORMATION
ISBN: 9781863951340
Publisher: Black Inc.
Format: Paperback / softback
Date Published: 01 December 2005
Country: Australia
Imprint: Quarterly Essay
Edition: 20th edition
Audience: General / adult, Tertiary education
DIMENSIONS
Spine width: 7.0mm
Width: 168.0mm
Height: 235.0mm
Weight: 180g
Pages: 144
About the Author
John Birmingham is the author of He Died with a Felafel in His Hand, Leviathan- The Unauthorised Biography of Sydney, three popular fiction series and two Quarterly Essays.
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