Cover art for The Seventies
Published
Newsouth Publishing, March 2019
ISBN
9781742234700
Format
Softcover, 304 pages
Dimensions
23.4cm × 15.3cm

The Seventies The personal, the political and the making of modern Australia

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WINNER of the 2020 Ernest Scott Prize for History

Shortlisted for the 2020 NSW Premier's Literary Awards Douglas Stewart Prize for Non-fiction

Australian Book Review's Books of the Year 2019

(read more here)

In

1970 homosexuality was illegal, God Save

the Queen was our national anthem and women pretended to be married to access

the pill. By the end of the decade conscription was scrapped, tertiary

education was free, access to abortion had improved, the White Australia policy

was abolished and a woman read the news on the ABC for the first time.

The

Seventies was the decade that shaped modern Australia. It was the decade of

'It's Time', stagflation and the Dismissal, a tumultuous period of economic and

political upheaval. But the Seventies was also the era when the personal became

political, when we had a Royal Commission into Human Relationships and when social

movements tore down the boundary between public and private life. Women wanted

childcare, equal pay, protection from violence and agency to shape their own

lives. In the process, the reforms they sought - and achieved, at least in part - reshaped Australia's culture and rewrote our expectations of government.

In

a lively and engaging style, Michelle Arrow has written a new history of this

transformative decade; one that is more urgent, and more resonant, than ever.

'At last, personal politics as national history. In lucid and nimble prose, Michelle Arrow demonstrates that - in the 1970s at least - it was about the relationships, stupid. A revelation.' - Clare Wright

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