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My Darlinghurst
My Darlinghurst
Regular price
€33.99
Regular price
€39.99
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Sale price
€33.99
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Australian history
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B01=Anna Clark
B01=Gabrielle Kemmis
B01=Tamson Pietsch
Cadigal)
Category1=Non-Fiction
Category=HBJM
Category=NHM
Category=WQH
COP=Australia
Darlinghurst
Delivery_Delivery within 10-20 working days
Eora
eq_bestseller
eq_history
eq_isMigrated=0
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
first nations
First Nations (Eora
Language_English
PA=Available
place
Price_€20 to €50
PS=Active
softlaunch
stories
Sydney
Product details
- ISBN 9781742237657
- Weight: 272g
- Dimensions: 210 x 280mm
- Publication Date: 01 Dec 2023
- Publisher: NewSouth Publishing
- Publication City/Country: AU
- Product Form: Paperback
- Language: English
Growing up in Sydney's Eastern Suburbs in the 1980s and 90s, I remember the pull of Darlinghurst. As a teenager, I would catch the 380 bus, get off at Taylor Square and dive gratefully into the slipstream broadmindedness -- of lives lived imaginatively.
Darlinghurst, a triangle of 80 hectares, sits on the edge of Sydney's CBD. Dominated by high rocky ridges on which grand colonial houses were once built, it is bordered in the east by Rushcutters Creek (Boundary Street), which was used by Aboriginal peoples until at least the 1860s, and in the south by a Gadigal pathway (Oxford Street), which traced a route out to the ocean. The colony's first mills were built beside valley streams, which were soon covered over by densely packed rows of terrace houses -- homes to workers, artisans and labourers.
Shaped by this landscape, and transforming it, a mixture of posh and poor, criminal and respectable, itinerant and established, sick and well have made their lives in Darlinghurst. My Darlinghurst profiles this colourful neighbourhood, revealing the stories of its migrant and Indigenous residents, the razor gangs and brothels, the soldiers and wharfies, and the artists and LGBTQIA+ communities who have made -- and continue to make -- Darlinghurst their home.
Darlinghurst, a triangle of 80 hectares, sits on the edge of Sydney's CBD. Dominated by high rocky ridges on which grand colonial houses were once built, it is bordered in the east by Rushcutters Creek (Boundary Street), which was used by Aboriginal peoples until at least the 1860s, and in the south by a Gadigal pathway (Oxford Street), which traced a route out to the ocean. The colony's first mills were built beside valley streams, which were soon covered over by densely packed rows of terrace houses -- homes to workers, artisans and labourers.
Shaped by this landscape, and transforming it, a mixture of posh and poor, criminal and respectable, itinerant and established, sick and well have made their lives in Darlinghurst. My Darlinghurst profiles this colourful neighbourhood, revealing the stories of its migrant and Indigenous residents, the razor gangs and brothels, the soldiers and wharfies, and the artists and LGBTQIA+ communities who have made -- and continue to make -- Darlinghurst their home.
Anna Clark is a historian at the Australian Centre for Public History based at the University of Technology Sydney. She is the author of Making Australian History (Penguin, 2022) and has written extensively on history education, historiography and historical consciousness.
Gabrielle Kemmis is a historian and archivist. She is also an experienced research manager and supported several projects while Centre Manager at the Australian Centre for Public History, University of Technology Sydney, including the Darlinghurst Public History Initiative. Gabrielle is currently working as an archivist at the Museums of History NSW.
Tamson Pietsch is a historian at the Australian Centre for Public History based at the University of Technology Sydney. Her most recent book is The Floating University: Experience, Empire and the Politics of Knowledge (Chicago, 2023). She has written extensively on the history of universities, education, empire and ideas.
Gabrielle Kemmis is a historian and archivist. She is also an experienced research manager and supported several projects while Centre Manager at the Australian Centre for Public History, University of Technology Sydney, including the Darlinghurst Public History Initiative. Gabrielle is currently working as an archivist at the Museums of History NSW.
Tamson Pietsch is a historian at the Australian Centre for Public History based at the University of Technology Sydney. Her most recent book is The Floating University: Experience, Empire and the Politics of Knowledge (Chicago, 2023). She has written extensively on the history of universities, education, empire and ideas.
My Darlinghurst
€33.99
