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Canberra

Canberra

by Paul Daley
Hardback
Publication Date: 01/11/2012

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An implicit sense of public service and 'otherness' has now come to permeate Canberra's identity to a point that there is a great smugness, arrogance even, that the rest of Australia can hate us - but they'll never know how good it is to live here.


Canberra is a city of orphans. People arrive temporarily for work, but stay on because they discover unanticipated promise and opportunity in a city that the rest of the country loathes, but can't really do without. Daley's Canberra begins and ends at the lake and its forgotten suburbs, traces of which can still be found on Burley Griffin's banks. It meanders through the cultural institutions that chronicle the unsavoury early life of Canberra, the graveyard at St John's where the pioneers rest and the mountains that surround the city. In Canberra, people don't ask you where you went to school, as they do in Melbourne, or where your house is and how much you paid for it, as they do in Sydney. They ask you where you've come from. And how long you're going to stay.
ISBN:
9781742233185
9781742233185
Category:
Social & cultural history
Format:
Hardback
Publication Date:
01-11-2012
Language:
English
Publisher:
NewSouth Publishing
Country of origin:
Australia
Pages:
336
Dimensions (mm):
178x110x28mm
Weight:
0.32kg
Paul Daley

Paul Daley is an author, journalist, essayist and short story writer. His books have been shortlisted for the Prime Minister's History Prize and ACT Book of the Year. He has won two Walkley Awards and the National Press Club Award for Excellence in Press Gallery Journalism. His essays have appeared in Meanjin and Griffith Review and he writes Postcolonial, a column for The Guardian about Australian national identity, history and Indigenous culture.

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