Issue Details: First known date: 2024... 2024 Graeme Davison Reveals the Power and Potential of Family History in Australia
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AbstractHistoryArchive Description

'This book is the second volume of Graeme Davison’s family history that began with his Lost Relations: Fortunes of my Family in Australia’s Golden Age (2015), following his mother’s line. This book traces Davison’s paternal line. The title comes from a bequest left to Davison by his great aunt Cissie Davison who bequeathed the clock to his father and then to Davison on his death. I will always remember this clock because in late 2017, I had the pleasure of listening to Davison deliver a keynote lecture on his family history research at the National Library of Australia during a conference on family history. He ended his talk in song, encouraging the audience to join him in a rendition of My Grandfather’s Clock, which they did, enthusiastically. As one of my students said, it was a ‘moving moment for all involved’.' (Introduction)

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    y separately published work icon History Australia vol. 21 no. 1 2024 27803595 2024 periodical issue

    'This editorial was penned during western New Year and the print version will probably appear during Lunar New Year. It is fitting that our special issue on ‘Ruptured Histories: Australia, China, Japan’ spans both festivities, incorporating the two poles that haunt this collection: (largely) white Australia and an ever-surging Asia.' (Editorial introduction)

    2024
    pg. 148-149
Last amended 2 Apr 2024 13:15:14
148-149 Graeme Davison Reveals the Power and Potential of Family History in Australiasmall AustLit logo History Australia
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