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£39.99

Uncertain Lives

Culture, Race and Neoliberalism in Australia
By: Jon Stratton

£39.99

Uncertain Lives examines the impact of neoliberal policies on everyday life in Australia. It explores the persistence of race and racism as multicultural values have been replaced, charting how race has influenced everything from daily life to border control.

Uncertain Lives is the first book to examine the impact of neoliberal policies on everyday life in Australia. Going beyond the discussions of multiculturalism that…
£39.99
£39.99
1-4438-3301-0 , ,
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Uncertain Lives is the first book to examine the impact of neoliberal policies on everyday life in Australia. Going beyond the discussions of multiculturalism that dominated the 1980s and 1990s, Uncertain Lives examines the persistence of race and racism in the Australian experience. While the governments of John Howard followed the rhetoric of neoliberalism in suggesting that market forces dominated social relations, in reality the racism that had been founded in the White Australia policy became again increasingly acceptable, and accepted, in a society no longer subject to the values of multiculturalism.

Uncertain Lives tracks this racism from its pervasiveness in everyday life to the ways race influenced decisions about who would, and would not, be allowed into Australia. From discussions of asylum seekers to migrants to the ways that thinking about the border itself has been transformed, Uncertain Lives charts the recent history of the Australian experience. Uncertain Lives ranges over events such as the Cronulla Riots of 2005 and the 2006 Beaconsfield mine rescue and uses a variety of recent films to highlight the impact of race in a society where liberal and social democratic values have been replaced by neoliberal ideology.

Jon Stratton is Professor of Cultural Studies at Curtin University, Perth, Australia. Jon has published widely in cultural studies, Jewish studies, popular music studies and Australian studies. Uncertain Lives updates his discussion of Australian multiculturalism in Race Daze: Australia in Identity Crisis (1998).

Hardback

  • ISBN: 1-4438-3301-0
  • ISBN13: 978-1-4438-3301-1
  • Date of Publication: 2011-10-05

Ebook

  • ISBN: 1-4438-3318-5
  • ISBN13: 978-1-4438-3318-9
  • Date of Publication: 2011-10-05
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Subject Codes:

  • BIC: JFFD, JFSL1, JFC
  • BISAC: SOC031000, SOC053000, SOC007000, POL055000, POL004000, POL070000
  • THEMA: JBFG, JBSL1, JBCC
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  • This book provides an important critical analysis of the Howard era exploring the personal implications of economic fundamentalism in the everyday lived experiences of Australians. The collection would sit very well with other works seeking to examine the ways in which other groups, such as sole parents for example, were excluded within under the Howard regime. The book is very accessible and would make a good addition to an undergraduate and postgraduate reading list; in particular, the introduction provides a concise historical overview that would be ideal reading for second or third year undergraduates. Stratton's collection is highly relevant for students undertaking cultural studies, sociology, postcolonial studies, Indigenous studies, Australian studies, criminology, community and social psychology, arts and social science courses.
    - - Merryn Smith The Australian Community Psychologist, 25:2 (2013).
  • For thirty years, Jon Stratton has been the sharpest, most acute observer of cultural phenomena around. This latest collection of his investigations into the racial contours of Australian neoliberalism is further testimony to the extraordinary contribution he has made to cultural studies around the globe.
    - – Toby Miller University of California, Riverside, USA; author of The Well-Tempered Self (1993), Technologies Of Truth (1998), Cultural Citizenship (2007) and Makeover Nation (2008)
  • In a context of global crises – political, economic and social – Stratton's book stages a series of compelling interventions that clarify the origins of these crises and their impact on the lives of both citizens and socially designated ‘others.' At once analytical and impassioned, this is a landmark book offering a rigorous and inspired account of the destructive ways in which neoliberalism has critically transformed Australian society and culture.
    - – Joseph Pugliese Macquarie University, Sydney, Australia; author of Biometerics (2010); editor of Transmediterranean (2010)

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