'Fred Rose's life takes us through rip-roaring tales from Australia's northern frontier to enthralling intellectual tussles over kinship systems and political dramas as he runs rings around his Petrov inquisitors.
'More than any other injustice, the abuse of Aborigines leads him into the Communist Party in 1942. His move to academic life in what he insisted on calling the German Democratic Republic made him a dissident against anthropological orthodoxies in the Soviet Bloc as he had been in Australia. Those final three decades also see his informing on his children to his Stasi handlers.
'Out of relentless research, Peter Monteath and Valerie Munt present an engrossing portrait of the short twentieth century from Rose's birth during the Great War to his death in Berlin shortly after the Wall comes down. The result is unputdownable for its sweep of events while causing us to reflect on how someone can be heroic and horrendous, appalling and admirable.' (Publication summary)
'Among the books by anthropologist Frederick Rose is Australia Re-visited: The Aborigine Story from Stone Age to Space Age (1968). In this memoir, written from behind the Iron Curtain, the author casts a critical if nostalgic eye over the country where his politics were forged. I bought my copy from the left-wing bookseller, the late Bob Gould, himself a legendary activist. ‘Fred Rose!’ he bellowed when he saw my purchase. ‘Of all the unreconstructed Stalinists!’' (Introduction)
'Among the books by anthropologist Frederick Rose is Australia Re-visited: The Aborigine Story from Stone Age to Space Age (1968). In this memoir, written from behind the Iron Curtain, the author casts a critical if nostalgic eye over the country where his politics were forged. I bought my copy from the left-wing bookseller, the late Bob Gould, himself a legendary activist. ‘Fred Rose!’ he bellowed when he saw my purchase. ‘Of all the unreconstructed Stalinists!’' (Introduction)