Wm. Matthew Kennedy
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Settler visions of imperial futures
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This chapter examines the meaning of empire to late nineteenth-century settlers residing in the various Australian colonies in the decades leading up to the formation of the Australian Commonwealth. It examines Australian settlers’ own attitudes to various London-centred prognostications about the empire’s future, most famous among them Charles Dilke’s idea of a Greater Britain. While it may have earned him praise in the imperial capital, Dilke’s idea drew sustained criticism in Australia. Complementing this discussion, the chapter also examines Australian settlers’ ideas of what their future entailed. This analysis reveals an important reason why Australians’ hope for their political future differed from British ideas: the increasing urgency with which settlers felt that white polities must be defended against a growing coalition of uncivilized and non-white foes. Empire, to these settler minds, was a crucial vehicle for maintaining white hegemony over the world, something upon which the existence of their own settler democracies depended. And to many, Australia’s own federation (while it also served local political ends) seemed a precondition for the longevity of empire and the racialized world order it created.

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The imperial Commonwealth

Australia and the project of empire, 1867–1914

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