Shattered ideals and fractured identities : Western Australia to Yugoslavia and back 1948-1955 / Dr Criena Fitzgerald.

By: Material type: TextTextPublisher: [Perth, Western Australia] : Dr Criena Fitzgerald, [2018]Description: ix, 343 pages : illustrations (some colour), map, portraits, facsimiles ; 24 cmContent type:
  • text
  • still image
Media type:
  • unmediated
Carrier type:
  • volume
Subject(s): Summary: As so many of us are migrants or the descendants of migrants to Australia—no matter our forefathers’ origins—there can be no better way of appreciating our present circumstances than to read of the travails experienced by those who came before us. What they achieved has largely raised us to where we are now. For a Better Life is an in-depth history of the experiences of Yugoslavs on the Western Australian goldfields. From the 1890s these self-funded migrants helped shape the economically important gold mining industry, working as boggers, truckers and machine miners as well as cutting wood for the industry on the woodlines. The lives of migrant women are also vividly brought to life through their letters and oral testimonies. The book tells the story about their migration journeys and government controls on their work and freedom in Western Australia. These migration stories brought vibrations of a distant European world and what Western Australia made of them and their ‘foreign baggage’ is central to the story, as also is the fate of the immigrants themselves. This is the first history to examine the race riots of 1934 from the view of an affected migrant community, and the work offers an intimate and frightening glimpse into the shattering effects of the looting and burning of the homes of those migrants. For those who trace their origins to the geographical region once patched together under the descriptive entity of ‘Yugoslavia’, Dr Fitzgerald has developed a treasure trove of history made up of ordinary people and their stories interwoven with world events but particularly with notions and prejudices that make their success and contribution to Western Australian society all the more remarkable.
List(s) this item appears in: Bibliografija knjiga Hrvata izvan Republike Hrvatske: Australija
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Na publikaciji pogrešan isbn (ISBN 9780648360353).

Includes bibliographical references and index.

As so many of us are migrants or the descendants of migrants to Australia—no matter our forefathers’ origins—there can be no better way of appreciating our present circumstances than to read of the travails experienced by those who came before us. What they achieved has largely raised us to where we are now. For a Better Life is an in-depth history of the experiences of Yugoslavs on the Western Australian goldfields. From the 1890s these self-funded migrants helped shape the economically important gold mining industry, working as boggers, truckers and machine miners as well as cutting wood for the industry on the woodlines. The lives of migrant women are also vividly brought to life through their letters and oral testimonies. The book tells the story about their migration journeys and government controls on their work and freedom in Western Australia. These migration stories brought vibrations of a distant European world and what Western Australia made of them and their ‘foreign baggage’ is central to the story, as also is the fate of the immigrants themselves. This is the first history to examine the race riots of 1934 from the view of an affected migrant community, and the work offers an intimate and frightening glimpse into the shattering effects of the looting and burning of the homes of those migrants. For those who trace their origins to the geographical region once patched together under the descriptive entity of ‘Yugoslavia’, Dr Fitzgerald has developed a treasure trove of history made up of ordinary people and their stories interwoven with world events but particularly with notions and prejudices that make their success and contribution to Western Australian society all the more remarkable.

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