Condemned: The Transported Men, Women and Children Who Built Britain’s Empire. Graham Seal. Yale University Press
Doom: The Politics of Catastrophe. Niall Ferguson. Penguin
Day of the Assassins. Michael Burleigh. Pan Macmillan
Stalin’s War. Sean McMeekin. Basic Books
Perhaps there is a rule that right-wing governments entering their decadence start to become interested in curriculum creation. John Howard, as he was being besieged by Kevin ’07, became obsessed with micromanaging the new history curriculum, overruling the designers he had chosen who had asked students to — gasp! — look at our past from different perspectives. Howard wanted a chronicle of Anglo-Saxon greatness instead. Months later he was gone, and within six months the only thing available to read in Australia was a small lambskin-bound selection of Rudd’s thoughts (The Little Beige Book).
Our current education minister, poor old Alan Tudge, seems to be having the same moment. Something awry, old boy? Find yourself tearily humming “Lady in Red” and scrolling old texts? His recent passionate defence of Anzac Day against the Red Guards who’ve drafted the latest proposed curriculum — their document says that the day’s meaning has been “contested” — was a joy to behold, primo right-wing white male hysteria. No one contests Anzac Day, Tudge whined, it’s a day when we celebrate that we’re the freest, most liberal country in the world, etc — all a product of our valiant struggle to prevent the bestial Ottoman from getting his sharp-nailed hands on New Guinea.
Anzac has been contested ceaselessly since the 1920s, and there’s something obviously bizarre about someone trying to celebrate a liberal society by closing down a pluralist model of education. It’s also entirely predictable. But the right are onto something when they exhibit wariness and fear at the prospect of any form of historical inquiry that is not simply recitative. For how could any re-examination of any historical period come to the conclusion that everything was pretty much alright? David Kemp, reviewed last time, exemplified the dilemma: to be any sort of competent historian, a right-winger must make “exceptional” the oppression of vast amounts of the population in order to preserve the narrative of essential goodness.
But Kemp is relatively reflective, compared to the right-wing big beasts of history such as Niall Ferguson and Michel Burleigh. In Doom, Ferguson spends hundreds of pages exploring how catastrophes happen through complex systems — largely, it seems, to let Trump and Boris off the hook for the COVID disaster, and to deny the de facto certainty of climate change.
Very Niall, but the tone is genial enough. Burleigh is something else. Hilariously, he can never retain a deep hatred of the left, even as he’s being enough of a historian to recognise the radical evil of empire and the West in the world. His book on the post-war third world, Small Wars, Faraway Places, is probably the best single volume on the modern uprising of the global south, but it reads like being trapped at a fogbound airport bar with a Daily Mail subscriber, impossibly snide about any human striving for better, courage in rebellion, or life steered by hope.
Day of the Assassins is no different, although it matters less than in his other works, many of them key texts on politics and fanaticism. Burleigh always tries to credit the possibility of motives that aren’t delusional, but he always drifts. Here, his overall judgement is that individual political assassinations make no difference. It looks sceptical, but it’s actually cynical, denying that change — for good or ill — is really possible, and discounting the weight of the possibility that, at some point, political murder may present itself as a necessary moral action.
Without that drive, Burleigh’s tone tends to sourness, a defect of all his works. And really, all the right-wingers are like that, as in Sean McMeekin’s bizarre argument that Stalin pretty much started the Second World War. Few historians, plenty of hysterians, all pursuing Tudge’s line of forward ideological defence.
What good history can do, and what it needs to be to be good, is shown by Australian historian Graham Seal’s Condemned, a sweeping study of a particular type of forced global population movement that were part of 500 years of western empires. This is less about genocides of the peoples they encountered than it is about the transportation of people to replace them, from the earliest trans-shipment of indentured servants and debtors to the Atlantic and global slave trade, convicts, orphans, the press-ganged — forced diasporae from one subject population to another.
The point — that empire was as much about the control of individual bodies in forced motion as of territories, as much about ceaseless movement as of occupation — has been long made in academic circles, but this is a synthesis of it for the general reader.
But in telling this sweeping story, Seal brings to life hundreds of characters whose lives became visible in these vast surging tides of humanity.
Here is Mary Carleton, friend of Pepys, and bigamist gold-digger extraordinaire, transported to Jamaica in 1671, where she became a pirate princess in Port Royal, returning in style to London on the ship she had left it on, clapped in irons. Convicted of return from banishment she tried to “plead the belly” (pregnancy); 12 women gave evidence to the contrary (sisters!) and she went “gaily” to execution.
Here is Christopher Jeaffreson, who starts as inheritor of a rundown estate, and ends up driving purchased criminals in manacles to the London docks, part monster, part put-upon small businessman, swindled by chancers at every turn.
Here is Charles Ashton, convict-poet, a Chester jack-the-lad, transported for theft, leaving a record of the sudden horror of being plunged into Port Arthur in 1845:
With the cat-a’-nine-tails in his hand / He flogged me till my back was raw / And painted with my crimson gore; When I awoke / with a frightful scream — It was a reality, and not a dream.
There are boatloads of convicts bound for America, offloaded by the crew on the isle of Lundy off Devon, as a secret slave plantation. There are Fenian political prisoners, escaping Perth on American whaling ships. And on and on. It is a rip-snorter of a book, as well as scholarly history. As the story passes from the 17th and 18th centuries, when fate seemed to dictate either enslavement, wealth or the scaffold, rogues start to be crowded out by saints, the progress of such being highly questionable — as in the empire-wide farm schools that started to rescue slum kids from useless poverty to frequently become lonely, starved teen-peon farm labour.
Seal’s virtuosity in bringing this altogether arises from the very questioning of received wisdom that Tudge would like to keep out of high schools. Australia is not a country founded in the brief aberrance of convict dumping to then resume its natural path as a beacon of Anglo-Saxon freedom. Our country is nothing other than a product of the movement of bodies by the state.
That can’t help but change our view, not only of what was but what is and who we are down to our toenails. To change our view of whiteness, race, the centre and periphery of a culture. And all done with a joy in the recounting of the best and worst of humanity on display, something that can only be achieved by the application of a motivated sympathy, beyond the intellectual decadence of the right-wing hysterians, and a rebuff to the culture warriors’ fearful resistance to the real encounter with full humanity, in its incommensurable affinity and otherness.
a small lambskin-bound selection of Rudd’s thoughts (The Little Beige Book).
Gold! That’s up there with Firstdog’s depiction of Kevin as a balloon. 🙂
Paddy! Thank you. It’s been so long…
Well said Guy. It always amuses and astonishes me how the right-wing in this country, always so eager to invoke the spectre of Western Civilisation as their object of defence, are at the same time so happy to throw away that cornerstone of Enlightenment, critical and rational investigation. Tudge et al. seem to me to have more in common ideologically with the world’s tin-pot dictators they claim to despise, than the philosophers, activists, and populations that overthrew monarchies and gave birth to the democratic system they supposedly love.
Ah yes, as opposed to the ‘critical and rational investigation’ of the woke left, so alive and well and thriving.
Condemned sounds fantastically promising and Guy’s review, as all the best reviews do, makes it impossible not to go out and buy it, however grumpily. I’ll likely hate it, because it’ll likely remind me that everything I thought I knew, I don’t. But I was taught – as was GR, and I suspect as were you, OrebGB – that that’s what a lifetime’s education demands, right? Reading stuff you…hate. Truly hate, for its against-the-grain veracity. With each passing year that’s what you seek out and that’s what you celebrate, gratefully, when do still manage to find it. The contemporary fading of this habit isn’t exclusive to the trog right. And all Alan Tudge is really saying, if you’re willing to cut a lesser eloquence some slack and read between partisan lines in best possible faith (as Rundle’s generosity towards conservatism in these reviews, so rare from the left now, reveal him at least to be), is that students of Anzac should read Bean, Gammage and official unit histories…too. Too. As well. Probably…first, even.
It’s easy and fun to laugh at the Kevin Donnellys of our times but there’s no real dispute that Australian students are rapidly slipping in relative world rankings in all the basic tools of lifelong auto-didactism (which is to say, autodidactic scepticism, which is to say, one’s elder-gifted facility & appetite for…radical history). All the founding skills and self-disciplines that unlock the infinite progressive interiors, including the latest quality renos (such as, one hopes, Condemned): literacy, maths, science, anchoring historical context, general knowledge. However good it is, it’s f**king useless to the non-reader. So while the trog right might not have the curriculum answers, at least they aren’t fudging the question altogether: whatever and however we’re teaching our kids…their education is getting worse, not better. So…well. You tell me, lefties.
Perhaps a future review subject – pivoting, say, on whatever harrumph Keith Windschuttle next harrumphs out? There’s always at least some good bits, and even if there’s not…why, the earnest striving lefty needs must read what she/he/they most hate, too. For your own ongoing education’s good, Birdy 🙂
Windschuttles latest book is on the Pell trial so, heh, no
Pity, it’s the one Keith read that is actually useful. Bits anyway. Ah well.
These reviews are terrific, thnx.
Totally agreed, Jack, re: the need to deliberately engage with and understand the ideas and arguments of those you disagree with (or hate). And on the importance of being an autodidact.
I think you grant Tudge far more good faith than he deserves though. Imo, he’s a bureaucratic culture warrior trying to stifle any educational content that betrays his jingoistic idea of the national good. There’s a long tradition in many parts of the world (including Australia as well, I’m sure) of politicians trying to direct the education of the youth in the name of patriotism, and left to fester and grow, that sort of thing can get rather sinister.
That doesn’t mean I think the history curriculum should just become a lefty love-in. I’ve personally had at least a couple of university units that felt very much like that, and even as someone very much on the political left myself, it was rather demotivating and dull to be taught from such a singular, narrow perspective. Teaching students how to analyse and weigh a range of sources and viewpoints for accuracy and nuance is obviously the right way forward. I’m sure we’d both agree on that.
Yeah, I’ve briefly encountered Tudge and if I had to assay, I’d say I’d say you’re right, OGB. He strikes as a lumpen ideologue from central casting with the usual soft-on for boilerplate classroom demagoguery. Fine. And sure, Windschuttle’s Pell book – to tease out my point a bit in mildly sour reaction to GR’s beautifully calibrated ‘heh’ – is at least 70% bog standard, eye-tic’d ‘all is rooned’ rwdb mouth-breathing. And yes, yes, in the average Kevin Donnelly screed you might find two and a half sentences that don’t outright make you want to kick a puppy.
But there’s still an ungainsayable and growing problem at the ‘out’ end product of our education processes as they are currently disposed. Not for the Talent, the Talent will always be fine. For the average-equipped (most of us); for the natural born under-equipped, especially. (My grand-dad was a stockman who ended his days as a factory maintenance drone, but Shakespeare and Gibbon hard-yarded on the nightshift saw his son to teachers college, and then his son to university.) It’s those two or three sentences you have to hard-yard to find in the dreck – the 30%, of one flimsy book in an Other’s seventy year career, the one true point a dull ideologue accidentally makes in the course of a half hour drinks reception – that stops you from becoming…them.
I get smarter with every edition of Crikey I read. Especially the truly awful, by-rote millennial dreck-fodder. (nb re: education output issue above). The average Crikey reader gets dumber with every edition of Quadrant Online they don’t. (To a point! One can safely be a little…mmm…less catholic over there, at least…)
Chrs OGB. It’s encounters of this nature that justify the sub. As a rule it’s lonely being conservative in intellectual Australia. (Murdoch of course not remotely counting.) It’s Rundle’s great appeal, especially in this review section. One never feels humiliated.
Sorry for the late reply Jack, I never received a notification of your post.
I think that’s the key right there. We, as in this country’s public discourse, certainly needs to find a better way to argue than the culture-war-style “Me and my friends are right, the rest of you lot are idiots” approach currently so dominant from both progressives and conservatives. Unfortunately, I despair at the chances of that improving while Murdoch holds such a grip over our public sphere, and in one of the few places that lefties dominate (Twitter) so many funnel their energy into useless cancelling campaigns.
Thanks for the thought-provoking discussion!
Yes, Murdoch has a lot to answer for, going back many, many decades. Helps one’s sense of humanity to try hard to remember him as a lonely, neglected, oft-humiliated young boy who just wanted his old man to play with him a bit more.
Pleasure all mine, OGB, chrs.
That was a very nice review. Thank you.
Is there censorship here?; my comment 3 hours ago – awaiting ‘moderation’ – has disappeared.
Just returned from Darwin, where an ongoing black aboriginal genocide is evident – on public buses and in public parks – in the form of body-and-mind-destroying systemic chronic unemployment and chronic alcoholism.
The nonsense of the culture wars is revealed: the actual black genocide which began in 1788 ‘at the barrel of a gun’ is continuing via the cruel orthodoxy of NAIRU, which most negatively affects those least able to compete in a modern economy.
Blacks most of all, since the original hunter-gatherer culture has been lost forever – as it had to be, because the arc of human “progress” can not be reversed (except by nuclear war….).
The solution is a Job Guarantee (see MMT), in short, because Oz has the resources to implement a JG and house every aboriginal decently.
As for light-skinned (mixed race) aboriginals wanting to romanticize the hunter gatherer culture (like Pascoe), their guilt/revulsion toward the actual racial genocide cannot be assuaged by any amount of glorification of that culture. Such people are a barrier rather than a solution to the on-going genocide. That’s why their efforts to ‘close the gap‘ have failed so spectacularly, and will continue to do so.
“It’s the economy, stupid”.
To ‘-1’, care to identify the error in my post?