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Frank Bongiorno

Frank Bongiorno

Frank Bongiorno is Professor of History at the Australian National University and is President of the Australian Historical Association. His recent publications include Dreamers and Schemers: A political history of Australia (La Trobe University Press, 2022) and The Eighties: The decade that transformed Australia (Black Inc., 2015) and he is co-editor, with Benjamin T. Jones and John Uhr, of Elections Matter: Ten federal elections that shaped Australia (Monash University Publishing, 2018). The second and updated edition of A Little History of the Australian Labor Party, written with Nick Dyrenfurth, is published by UNSW Press on 1 May 2024.

Frank Bongiorno reviews ‘A Political Memoir: Intellectual combat in the Cold War and the culture wars’ by Robert Manne

December 2024, no. 471 25 November 2024
Raimond Gaita is quoted in his close friend Robert Manne’s new memoir as saying that a ‘dispassionate judgement is not one which is uninformed by feeling, but one which is undistorted by feeling’. That distinction points to one of the many attractive qualities of A Political Memoir: Intellectual combat in the Cold War and the culture wars. Manne is typically dispassionate in telling the sto ... (read more)

Frank Bongiorno reviews ‘A Better Australia: Politics, public policy and how to achieve lasting reform’ by John Brumby, Scott Hamilton, and Stuart Kells

November 2024, no. 470 24 October 2024
It is a sign of the times that A Better Australia: Politics, public policy and how to achieve lasting reform begins with a discussion of climate and energy policy. No policy field better illustrates the deficiencies in Australia’s politics over the past generation. It is a tale, as one of the book’s authors, John Brumby, reminds us, of avoidable failure and lost opportunities, as the issue was ... (read more)

Frank Bongiorno reviews 'So Monstrous a Travesty: Chris Watson and the world's first national labour government' by Ross McMullin

June-July 2004, no. 262 01 June 2004
The true believers, proud of their history and with hope for the future, assembled in Melbourne on 27 April 2004 to celebrate the first time the Labor Party formed a federal ministry a century before – and, of course, to attend the launch of the obligatory book commemorating the event, So Monstrous a Travesty. That government, led by Chilean-born John Christian Watson (1867-1941), lasted four m ... (read more)

Frank Bongiorno reviews ‘Yes, Premier: Labor leadership in Australia’s states and territories’ edited by John Wanna and Paul Williams

June–July 2005, no. 272 01 June 2005
This book explores an unprecedented phenomenon: coast-to-coast Labor governments in the states and territories. The peculiarity of the current situation is magnified by Labor’s continuing failure at the national level. Where state politics can boast political ‘stars’ such as Bob Carr and Peter Beattie, federally the cupboard seems bare. Yet this collection reminds us of the unfairness of com ... (read more)

‘“Thin labourism”: How is the Albanese government travelling?’ by Frank Bongiorno

April 2024, no. 463 25 March 2024
The Journal of Australian Political Economy (JAPE) recently published a special issue to mark the (presumed) halfway point of the Albanese Labor government. There was an editorial and nineteen articles. As you would expect, the verdict was mixed. The most striking thing to me, however, was that the authors had enough material to work with. A similar exercise for the Abbott and Morrison governmen ... (read more)

Frank Bongiorno reviews ‘Justice and Hope: Essays, lectures and other writings’ by Raimond Gaita

January-February 2024, no. 461 18 December 2023
For a man many would regard as the very epitome of the type, Raimond Gaita seems rather hostile to the concept of the intellectual. It is ‘irredeemably mediocre’, he explains, inferior to the kinds of moral and political responsibility that attach to teacher or politician. Intellectuals are active in the public domain, grappling with ideas, culture, and politics, but they have often lacked ind ... (read more)

Frank Bongiorno reviews 'Prudish Nation: Life, love and libido' by Paul Dalgarno

December 2023, no. 460 27 November 2023
Max Dupain's portrait of Jean Lorraine, a favourite model among Sydney’s artists and photographers of the 1930s and 1940s, graces the elegant cover of Paul Dalgarno’s Prudish Nation. All that gives a somewhat misleading impression of the nature of this book. It is not a work of history. Nor is it an investigation of whether Australia is a notably prudish nation. The variety of gender and sexua ... (read more)

Frank Bongiorno reviews 'MUP: A centenary history' by Stuart Kells

April 2023, no. 452 27 March 2023
Publishers rarely become big news in Australia, university presses even less often. It was notable therefore that the departure in early 2019 of Melbourne University Publishing’s CEO, Louise Adler, and some members of the MUP board, became a matter on which so many of the nation’s political and cultural élite felt they needed to have an opinion. A strong coterie came out in her defence. This ... (read more)

Frank Bongiorno reviews 'How to Rule Your Own Country: The weird and wonderful world of micronations' by Harry Hobbs and George Williams

January-February 2023, no. 450 26 December 2022
There was a moment there, in the opening chapter of How to Rule Your Own Country: The weird and wonderful world of micronations, when I thought I was about to undertake an improving academic tour. The authors, Harry Hobbs and George Williams, are after all both legal academics. That first chapter has sections with earnest headings such as ‘What is a micronation?’ and ‘Why do people set up mi ... (read more)

'Politics by other means: Enlarging our diminished sense of political leadership' by Frank Bongiorno

May 2022, no. 442 23 April 2022
Earlier this year, Ray Hadley was interviewing Scott Morrison on 2GB when the subject turned to the internal preselection battles of the Liberal Party in New South Wales. ‘And so it’s time for those who, you know, don’t do this for a living, to really allow those who really need to get on for the sake of the Australian people here,’ Morrison declared, none too coherently. It is impossib ... (read more)
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