Accessibility Tools

  • Content scaling 100%
  • Font size 100%
  • Line height 100%
  • Letter spacing 100%

Geoffrey Blainey

Geoffrey Blainey

Geoffrey Blainey, a practising historian for some sixty years, has written on Australian and world history. Long attracted to museums, he was deputy chairman of the Whitlam government's Enquiry into Museums and National Collections in 1974–75. Later, he served on the board of the Australian War Memorial for seven years. His book, The Causes of War (1973, 1988), is debated in military academies and in US universities.

Geoffrey Blainey reviews 'Dick Hamer: The liberal Liberal' by Tim Colebatch

January-February 2015, no. 368 01 January 2015
Geoffrey Blainey reviews 'Dick Hamer: The liberal Liberal' by Tim Colebatch
Rupert (‘Dick’) Hamer proved to be one of Australia’s most innovative premiers. One sign of his unusual prestige is that this history of his life and times has perhaps been publicly praised more by Labor leaders than by his own Liberal colleagues. Hamer’s family background was in the church, law, business, and politics. His paternal grandfather was the minister of the wealthy Independent ... (read more)

Geoffrey Blainey reviews 'A Short History of the Twentieth Century' by John Lukacs

February 2014, no. 358 17 January 2014
Geoffrey Blainey reviews 'A Short History of the Twentieth Century' by John Lukacs
The author of this impressive book had his ninetieth birthday this January. Born to a Jewish mother and Catholic father, he was fortunate to escape death in his native Hungary in World War II and to live another existence in the United States as an intellectual and historian throughout the Cold War. The label he sometimes claims is ‘reactionary’, but this is too simple for such a thoughtful sp ... (read more)

Geoffrey Blainey reviews 'Australian War Memorial: Treasures from a Century of Collecting' by Nola Anderson

April 2013, no. 350 26 March 2013
Geoffrey Blainey reviews 'Australian War Memorial: Treasures from a Century of Collecting' by Nola Anderson
The Australian War Memorial has become a kind of national cathedral. Those who visit Canberra for the first time feel that they must see it. It fascinates nationalists, those who are entranced by past wars, those who love displays of technology, relatives of the war dead, those attracted to family history, and the countless visitors who unknowingly seek heroes outside the sporting and theatrical a ... (read more)

Geoffrey Blainey reviews 'The Biggest Estate on Earth: How Aborigines Made Australia' by Bill Gammage

November 2011, no. 336 25 October 2011
Geoffrey Blainey reviews 'The Biggest Estate on Earth: How Aborigines Made Australia' by Bill Gammage
This bold book, with its lucid prose and vivid illustrations, will be discussed for years to come. It is not original in the narrow sense of the word, but it takes an important idea to new heights because of the author’s persistence and skill. Bill Gammage, an oldish and experienced historian of rural background, looks at nearly every region of Australia, its surface landscape and vegetation. Hi ... (read more)
Page 2 of 2