Accessibility Tools

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

Judith Brett

Judith Brett reviews ‘Liberal Women: Federation to 1949’ by Margaret Fitzherbert

June-July 2004, no. 262 01 June 2004
It has long been claimed that women were the backbone of the pre-World War II Australian Liberal Parties and a crucial strengthening agent for the new Liberal Party that Robert Menzies formed in 1945. Labor supporters said this was because women were conservative, easily led by their husbands, and didn’t understand much of the world outside the home. Liberals argued that it was just because they ... (read more)

Judith Brett reviews ‘Howard’s Second and Third Governments: Australian Commonwealth Administration 1998–2004’ edited by Chris Aulich and Roger Wettenhall

August 2005, no. 273 01 August 2005
A flurry of books have been produced about the cultural aspects of John Howard’s governments: for example, Andrew Markus’s Race: John Howard and the Remaking of Australia (2001), Stuart Macintyre and Anna Clark’s The History Wars (2003) and Carol Johnson’s Governing Change: From Keating to Howard (2000). Useful edited collections have also been produced on each of the elections of 1996, 19 ... (read more)

Judith Brett reviews ‘John Howard and the Conservative Tradition’ by Norman Abjorensen

March 2009, no. 309 01 March 2009
There has always been a problem with locating conservatism in Australia’s political traditions. As a new settler society dedicated to development, it is hard to see a natural place for a political philosophy that advocates taking things slowly and respecting the wisdom of the past. Nevertheless, the term has been in use as a political label in Australia since the nineteenth century, generally to ... (read more)

Judith Brett reviews 'R.G. Menzies: A portrait' by John Bunting

June 1988, no. 101 01 June 1988
John Bunting’s portrait of Robert Menzies is a book for fans. Beautifully produced, with a handsome cover, tartan endpapers, and a royal blue marker, it is an ideal gift for those who agree with Bunting’s judgement – that Menzies was ‘grand and magnificent, the best man of his time’. It will also please those who, though more reserved in their admiration than Bunting, remember Menzies wi ... (read more)