ABSTRACT

Wunderbar Country (1982) examines the experiences of Australia’s second largest migrant community, the Germans. Many Germans saw Australia as a land of social equality and mobility, with unlimited resources and economic possibilities. This book analyses Australian social legislation and the labour movement, the subject of much debate in Germany. Articles present both sides to an argument, with some stating that Australia was indeed a workers’ paradise, the home of social progress; others point to miserable working conditions. It also deals with the experiences of immigrants from Germany to this new land: rural life in Bong Bong; a meeting with Ned Kelly; Adelaide in the 1850s; the wild gold town of Ballarat.

part One|122 pages

The Land of Social Miracles

chapter 2|11 pages

Factory legislation in Victoria

chapter 4|14 pages

The workers' paradise

chapter 5|14 pages

Capital and labour

chapter 6|10 pages

Workers' conditions in Australia

chapter 7|11 pages

The New Zealand ideal

chapter 9|10 pages

A quiet backwater: two letters

chapter 10|23 pages

Six months in Brisbane

part Two|100 pages

The People and the Bush

chapter 12|11 pages

Travels in New England

chapter 13|12 pages

An early conservationist

chapter 14|13 pages

From Adelaide: a migrant's lament

chapter 15|7 pages

Australian women

chapter 17|10 pages

Marvellous Ballarat

chapter 18|5 pages

A miraculous escape

chapter 20|18 pages

Love at Bong Bong