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Top Blokes

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Paperback / softback
13-September-2021
160 Pages
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In this perceptive and often hilarious essay, Lech Blaine dissects some top blokes, with particular focus on Scott Morrison and Anthony Albanese, but stretching back to Bob Hawke and Kerry Packer. This is a riveting narrative of how image conquered politics, just as globalisation engulfed the Australian economy. While many got rich and entertained, look where we ended up.
Blaine shows how first Howard, then Morrison, brought a cohort of voters over to the Coalition side, "flipping" what was once working-class Labor culture. He weaves in his own experiences as he explores the persona of the Aussie larrikin. What are its hidden contradictions - can a larrikin be female, Indigenous or Muslim, say? - and how has it been transformed by an age of affluence? He makes the case that the time has come to bury a myth and for the nation to seize a new reality.
"Anti-authoritarianism doesn't need the vocabulary of the bush poets, the accent of Mick Dundee or the imprimatur of the shock jocks and media tycoons to inspire social change. It sounds like Grace Tame, and acts like Behrouz Boochani, and looks like Adam Goodes." Lech Blaine, Top Blokes
This issue also contains correspondence discussing Quarterly Essay 82, Exit Strategy, from Jennifer Rayner, Richard Denniss, Dennis Altman, Tanya Plibersek, Andrew Norton, Michael Wesley, Travers McLeod, Rachel Withers, Andrew Wear, and George Megalogenis.

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$36.00
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Top Blokes

$36.00

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In this perceptive and often hilarious essay, Lech Blaine dissects some top blokes, with particular focus on Scott Morrison and Anthony Albanese, but stretching back to Bob Hawke and Kerry Packer. This is a riveting narrative of how image conquered politics, just as globalisation engulfed the Australian economy. While many got rich and entertained, look where we ended up.
Blaine shows how first Howard, then Morrison, brought a cohort of voters over to the Coalition side, "flipping" what was once working-class Labor culture. He weaves in his own experiences as he explores the persona of the Aussie larrikin. What are its hidden contradictions - can a larrikin be female, Indigenous or Muslim, say? - and how has it been transformed by an age of affluence? He makes the case that the time has come to bury a myth and for the nation to seize a new reality.
"Anti-authoritarianism doesn't need the vocabulary of the bush poets, the accent of Mick Dundee or the imprimatur of the shock jocks and media tycoons to inspire social change. It sounds like Grace Tame, and acts like Behrouz Boochani, and looks like Adam Goodes." Lech Blaine, Top Blokes
This issue also contains correspondence discussing Quarterly Essay 82, Exit Strategy, from Jennifer Rayner, Richard Denniss, Dennis Altman, Tanya Plibersek, Andrew Norton, Michael Wesley, Travers McLeod, Rachel Withers, Andrew Wear, and George Megalogenis.

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