y separately published work icon Australian Historical Studies periodical issue   peer reviewed assertion
Issue Details: First known date: 2018... vol. 49 no. 1 2018 of Australian Historical Studies est. 1988-1989 Australian Historical Studies
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Contents

* Contents derived from the , 2018 version. Please note that other versions/publications may contain different contents. See the Publication Details.
Kenneth Stanley Inglis AO (1929–2017), Raelene Frances , Bruce Scates , single work obituary

Kenneth Stanley Inglis died of pancreatic cancer on 1 December 2017. He continued to write until a few days before his death, imparting careful instructions to Jay Winter and Seamus Spark, on their collective two-volume biography of the 'Dunera Boys'. It says much about Ken Inglis that his last work was a collaborative endeavour, and a project that profiled the talent of both established and early career scholars. As Frank Bongiorno, one of many grateful students, has noted, the measure of Inglis' scholarship is not just the distinctive contribution he made to our discipline, but the opportunities he created all his life for others.'  (Introduction)

(p. 410-412)
Mickey Sue Dewar, Ann McGrath , single work obituary

'Dr Michelle ('Mickey') Sue Dewar was an outstanding historian of the Northern Territory (NT) and a champion of history across many genres. Her contribution to the study of the north was rigorous, broad-ranging and prolific. Her body of work is often iconoclastic, but always entertaining and meticulously researched. ' (Introduction)
 

(p. 413-415)
[Review] The Honest History Book, Bart Ziino , single work

'In their introduction to this collection, David Stephens and Alison Broinowski distinguish between ‘honest history’, the concept, and ‘honest history’, the coalition: a group of (mostly) historians disturbed at the unbalanced mobilisation of Australia's past for political purposes. The Honest History Book is a reflection of that coalition and its concerns. Here, ‘dishonest history’ resides largely in politicians’ persistent and exaggerated emphasis on the importance of Anzac in the making of Australia, otherwise termed ‘Anzackery’. The book's stated aim is to provide a perspective on Australian history in which the significance of war and the Anzac tradition is reduced, and drawn in proportion to other major themes in the national past.'  (Introduction)

(p. 416-417)
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