This paper investigates the continuing relationships between Australian, Indonesian and Indian unionists and activists in the aftermath of an intense political struggle in Australia from 1945 to 1949 in support of Indonesian independence. These groups had been brought together initially by intersections between the networks established through colonialism, like trade unions, communism and feminism, with those having much longer histories, like Islam. The men and women in this Australian setting expressed their vision in 1945 for a future of universal and transnational networks across the Indian Ocean which would continue the alliances they had found so fruitful. Their experiences as well as their hopes can be called cosmopolitanism and were...
This paper examines the representation of women by Australian soldiers in Imperial India. For many A...
In January 1950, Commonwealth countries met in Colombo, Ceylon (present day Sri Lanka) with the obje...
When genealogies of oppression are revealed in their correct historical context they provide insight...
This paper investigates the continuing relationships between Australian, Indonesian and Indian union...
At the end of World War 2, there were high hopes across the Indian Ocean for a new world in which th...
At the end of World War 2, there were high hopes across the Indian Ocean for a new world in which th...
The drama which began to unfold in Australia in August 1945 brought together people from countries n...
This article focuses on the friendship between two maritime workers and unionists - Tuk Subianto fro...
In September 1945 a boycott of Dutch shipping in Australian waters was called in support of the Indo...
The struggle for Indonesian independence that arose in the aftermath of the Second World War did not...
This article is a study of the response of the Australian government under Robert Menzies to the eme...
In the twenty years since Indonesia declared herself independent, Indonesia and Australia have enjo...
© Cambridge University Press 2018. The decades from the 1940s to the 1960s were ones of increasing c...
This story of Indigenous Australian-Indonesian intermarriage is one that sheds light on the changes ...
The large scale post-war migration impacted beyond the change of the demographic structure of Austra...
This paper examines the representation of women by Australian soldiers in Imperial India. For many A...
In January 1950, Commonwealth countries met in Colombo, Ceylon (present day Sri Lanka) with the obje...
When genealogies of oppression are revealed in their correct historical context they provide insight...
This paper investigates the continuing relationships between Australian, Indonesian and Indian union...
At the end of World War 2, there were high hopes across the Indian Ocean for a new world in which th...
At the end of World War 2, there were high hopes across the Indian Ocean for a new world in which th...
The drama which began to unfold in Australia in August 1945 brought together people from countries n...
This article focuses on the friendship between two maritime workers and unionists - Tuk Subianto fro...
In September 1945 a boycott of Dutch shipping in Australian waters was called in support of the Indo...
The struggle for Indonesian independence that arose in the aftermath of the Second World War did not...
This article is a study of the response of the Australian government under Robert Menzies to the eme...
In the twenty years since Indonesia declared herself independent, Indonesia and Australia have enjo...
© Cambridge University Press 2018. The decades from the 1940s to the 1960s were ones of increasing c...
This story of Indigenous Australian-Indonesian intermarriage is one that sheds light on the changes ...
The large scale post-war migration impacted beyond the change of the demographic structure of Austra...
This paper examines the representation of women by Australian soldiers in Imperial India. For many A...
In January 1950, Commonwealth countries met in Colombo, Ceylon (present day Sri Lanka) with the obje...
When genealogies of oppression are revealed in their correct historical context they provide insight...