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Vanishing Australians

Vanishing Australians


Condition remarks:
Book: Fair
Jacket: Worn/faded, no tears
Pages: Good
Markings: Previous owner
Condition remarks: Shelf wear on biding. Chipped around spine of jacket. Pages cript and intact.

A compelling work of mid-twentieth-century Australian non-fiction, Vanishing Australians chronicles the lives, cultures, and communities of Aboriginal Australians at a time when their traditions and ways of life were under severe threat from modernization and colonial pressures. George Farwell draws on firsthand observation and travel across the Australian interior to present vivid portraits of Indigenous peoples, their spiritual connections to the land, and the social forces eroding their ancient ways. Written with a journalist's eye for detail and a humanist's sense of urgency, the narrative illustrates both the richness of Aboriginal culture and the devastating consequences of displacement and assimilation policies. Farwell's prose is evocative and empathetic, grounding broad social commentary in the personal stories of individuals and communities facing an uncertain future. A significant document of its era, the work stands as both a cultural record and a moral call to attention.

$4.56

Original: $13.02

-65%
Vanishing Australians

$13.02

$4.56
Product image 1

Description


Condition remarks:
Book: Fair
Jacket: Worn/faded, no tears
Pages: Good
Markings: Previous owner
Condition remarks: Shelf wear on biding. Chipped around spine of jacket. Pages cript and intact.

A compelling work of mid-twentieth-century Australian non-fiction, Vanishing Australians chronicles the lives, cultures, and communities of Aboriginal Australians at a time when their traditions and ways of life were under severe threat from modernization and colonial pressures. George Farwell draws on firsthand observation and travel across the Australian interior to present vivid portraits of Indigenous peoples, their spiritual connections to the land, and the social forces eroding their ancient ways. Written with a journalist's eye for detail and a humanist's sense of urgency, the narrative illustrates both the richness of Aboriginal culture and the devastating consequences of displacement and assimilation policies. Farwell's prose is evocative and empathetic, grounding broad social commentary in the personal stories of individuals and communities facing an uncertain future. A significant document of its era, the work stands as both a cultural record and a moral call to attention.