Weevils in the flour : an oral record of the 1930s Depression in Australia

by Wendy Lowenstein

Paperback, 1983

Description

This is a magnificent oral record of the experiences of ordinary Australians during the Great Depression of the 1930s, and has been continuously in print since it was published in 1978. What does the family breadwinner do after suddenly getting the sack? How do you manage when you are working every second week only or your wages - but not your mortgage - have been cut by 20 per cent? Working for the dole, living in shanty towns, squatting in empty buildings, standing forever in queues, despised by bureaucrats and slowly losing self-respect - all these experiences and more are described vividly within these pages. Now, more than 70 years after the events it deals with, Weevils in the Flour rebukes a new generation of failed policy-makers. This edition carries a new preface by the author which comments angrily on 'the same old capitalist system, with the gloves off' that has produced such prolonged, intense distress. 'Great book on the Depression ... so good it is impossible to praise it sufficiently without sounding absurd.' - The Age 'The range of this work is immense ... it should become a major work of reference in Australian social history.' - Sydney Morning Herald… (more)

Publication

Fitzroy, Vic. : Scribe, 1998.

Pages

xii; 464

Awards

The Age Book of the Year Award (Shortlist — Non-fiction — 1979)

Barcode

3853
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