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HomeUpcoming EventsWhat Is Enlightenment In Australia? Towards a New Account of Its History and Uses
What is Enlightenment in Australia? Towards a New Account of its History and Uses

Image: Daniel Boyd, "Sir No Beard", Oil on Canvas, Art Gallery NSW, 2007. 

This paper presents the outlines of a new collaborative project on Enlightenment in Australia. The project has two strands, one grounded in contemporary history, the other in the Enlightenment era itself. The contemporary strand examines how the concept of Enlightenment is understood in today’s Australia. Our paper will discuss Australian usages particularly through the 2023 Voice Referendum, which demonstrate most neatly how Enlightenment carries great persuasive weight in Australian discourse but with little consensus about what it actually means. How can so many public figures agree that the Enlightenment is central to Australian structures and tenets yet, so few concur on what it is? The late 18th-century strand will deepen ongoing research into Australia’s role in both expressing and forging key practices of the Enlightenment era. Our paper will survey how settler Australia figures in a field that has undergone notable revision over the last generation – mostly in terms of its singularity and its mode of diffusion. How did the activities of the colonial state and population reflect or challenge recent scholarly understandings of the Enlightenment?

 

Join Zoom Meeting: https://anu.zoom.us/j/88902124291?pwd=f9S8I7GgtJwog6OkB0E3BQTxq77WdN.1 

Meeting ID: 889 0212 4291

Password: 814181

Date & time

  • Wed 20 May 2026, 4:00 pm - 5:00 pm

Location

Lectorial 1 (room 1.21) and online

Speakers

  • Kate Fullagar (Australian Catholic University)
  • Alex Cook (ANU)

Event Series

School of History Seminar Series

Contact

  •  Ruby Ekkel
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