51st State?
Dennis Altman
'Read this book. It will encourage real thought about our relations with the US rather than juvenile exchanges of insults. And maybe it will encourage us to accept responsibility to find out own way, rather than moan about the influence of the Americans.'
Michael Costello (The Australian)'Altman's book, as one might suspect, is a thoughtful and informed guide to our own successes and shortcomings and necessary reading for those trying to sort out a positive future relationship with America.'
John Button (The Age)51st State? is a 'thoughtful extended essay on Australian identity if a US-dominated world ... The book is refreshing because it is logical and moderate in tone — a break from the often over-heated commentary which marks the battleground between Australian conservative commentators and leftish intellectuals.'
David Costello (The Courier Mail)Australian prime ministers since Harold Holt have all fostered close relationships with the United States, but John Howard has initiated economic and military policies that have bound the two countries even tighter. As a result, many Australians now believe that not only our sovereignty but also our very identity as a nation is under threat, and that we are fast becoming America’s 51st state.
If this view is correct, it should be reflected not only in our foreign policy but also in our domestic policies. Indeed, the weakening of social safety nets, the privatisation of areas long seen as government responsibilities, and the signing of the Free Trade Agreement all point to the triumph of US-style neo-liberalism.
Yet, as Dennis Altman shows, the story is not so simple. Even as official rhetoric immerses us ever deeper into the US worldview, the resilience of the Australian social contract is imposing real limits on the application of neo-liberal principles. And, despite his enthusiastic membership of the coalition of the willing, Howard has assiduously cultivated economic and political ties within our region which, as the global balance of power shifts, will become increasingly relevant.
In this elegant and sophisticated meditation on Australian identity, Altman suggests that the tendency to attribute malign American influence to everything we dislike about the contemporary world is the flipside of seeing the US as the only model worthy of emulation, and serves to conceal the deeper questions we face namely, how does Australia imagine its future?
‘If you want to understand where Australia stands at the beginning of the twenty-first century and where it is heading, then 51st State? is a must read. Four stars.’
(Bookseller & Publisher)‘This is a thoughtful essay by Dennis Altman which poses many questions, provides some answers, and gives food for thought to the reader, as any good essayist should.’
Michael Ashby (Eureka Street)A 'provocative new book'.
Antony Loewenstein (Sun-Herald)'This is a readily digestible primer for those who have just assumed we must be following obsequiously in Uncle Sam's steps.'
Craig Goddard (Daily Telegraph)Dennis Altman
Dennis Altman is professor of politics at La Trobe University. He is the author of eleven books, most recently Gore Vidal's America, Global Sex, and the memoir Defying Gravity. He was professor of Australian studies at Harvard (2005), and held visiting fellowships at New York University (2002) and University of Chicago (1997). He has served on a range of international committees on HIV/AIDS, and served as president of the AIDS Society of Asia and the Pacific between 2001 and 2005. He was named by the Bulletin in June 2006 as one of the 100 most influential Australians ever.