Outcasts of Melbourne

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Back Slums
Category=JHB
City Abattoirs
colonial metropolis
Cos
criminal underclass research
Emerald Hill
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Final Consent
Fishermen's Bend
Fishermen’s Bend
Holiness Meetings
Illustrated Australian News
La Trobe Streets
Large Family
Marvellous Melbourne
Melbourne Corporation
Moonee Ponds
Mrs Austin
nineteenth-century Melbourne social structures
North Melbourne
Noxious Trades
poverty
public health authorities
public health history
Saltwater River
Salvation Army
Sanitary Crisis
Sanitary Reform
slum conditions analysis
social history
South Melbourne
South Yarra
St Kilda
Swanston Street
urban poverty studies
urbanisation and disease
Victorian era social reform
West Melbourne
Young Men

Product details

  • ISBN 9780367719869
  • Weight: 600g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 31 Mar 2021
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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Behind the glittering image of 'Marvellous Melbourne' there existed in the popular imagination another, very different, picture of the colonial metropolis. This was the city of 'low life', of crowded slums, poverty, disease and vice.

The nine essays in The Outcasts of Melbourne attempt to reveal the social realities behind this picture. They include new accounts of the forces which created the city's physical environment. They show how perceptions of a city can be shaped by campaigning journalists, artists and writers. They present collective portraits of the poor and the 'criminal classes' - and of those who set out to save them. They describe how the city's guardians - the police, public health authorities and charity workers - responded to the challenge of the slums.

By imaginative use of the rich deposits in the public records, these explorations in social history present new ways of documenting the lives of people whose daily activities were seldom reported in the popular press. In doing so, they also map the chains of causation which link the actions of individuals - appearing before a committee of a benevolent society, getting arrested, evangelising at a Salvation Army rally - to the social forces which have shaped the cities in which we live.

GRAEME DAVISON is Professor of History at Monash University. He is the author of The Rise and Fall of Marvellous Melbourne (1978) and a co-editor of Australians 1988, a volume in the forthcoming bicentennial history. He is also the Chairman of the Historic Buildings Council of Victoria. DAVID DUNSTAN is the author of Governing the Metropolis (1984). He has been a journalist and a teacher at the University of Melbourne and at Deakin University, and is at present Senior Historian with the Heritage Branch of the Victorian Ministry for Planning and Environment. CHRIS MCCONVILLE teaches urban studies at Footscray Institute of Technology. A broadcaster and writer, he is co-editor of Families in Colonial Australia (1985).