Performance Politics

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A01=Joshua Black
ABC
advisers
audiences
Australian Labor Party
Author_Joshua Black
autobiography
biography
books
broadcasters
Canberra
Category=JPHL
Cheryl Kernot
controversies
diaries
documentaries
drama
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eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_society-politics
factions
forthcoming
Gareth Evans
government
history
ideology
interviews
John Howard
journalists
Julia Gillard
Kevin Rudd
Laurie Oakes
leaders
legacies
Liberal Party
Malcolm Turnbull
Mark Latham
media
memoir
ministers
Paul Keating
politicians
politics
public affairs
publishers
Q&A Wayne Swan
reputations
storytelling

Product details

  • ISBN 9781761170836
  • Dimensions: 153 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 01 Sep 2026
  • Publisher: NewSouth Publishing
  • Publication City/Country: AU
  • Product Form: Paperback
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How has Australian political life become so personalised, emotional and autobiographical?

In Performance Politics historian and speechwriter Josh Black provides an eye-opening account of how Australian politicians have become experts at fashioning and refashioning stories about themselves, their lives, personal ambitions and political entanglements. Delving into memoirs, autobiographies, documentaries, media coverage, personal papers and original interviews, the book reveals how much of our recent political history has been delivered through the prism of the publishing house, the book launch, the documentary, and the loungerooms where political retrospectives were broadcast. From a time when ‘telling tales out of school’ (as Billy Hughes once put it) was not the done thing, to one where the 2024 Nemesis documentary showcased backstabbing, character assassinations and high emotions.

Performance Politics shows how political life writing and documentary making has played an outsized role in creating the story-driven political culture of our times. Settling scores, shaping legacies and dramatising the democratic process, sometimes in shocking ways.
Joshua Black is a political historian, speechwriter, policy researcher and media adviser and co-editor of Gold Standard? Remembering the Hawke Government (NewSouth).

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