The Liquid Land

Raphaela Edelbauer (trans. Jen Calleja)

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The Liquid Land Raphaela Edelbauer (tr. Jen Calleja)

Seven Fallen Feathers

Tanya Talaga

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Seven Fallen Feathers Tanya Talaga

The Snow Line

Tessa McWatt

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The Snow Line Tessa McWatt

Saved by the Siesta

Brice Faraut (trans. Eric Rosencrantz)

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Saved by the Siesta Brice Faraut (tr. Eric Rosencrantz)

The Newcomer

Laura Elizabeth Woollett

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The Newcomer Laura Elizabeth Woollett

Let’s Talk About Hard Things

Anna Sale

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Let’s Talk About Hard Things Anna Sale

A Pair of Pears and an Orange

Anna McGregor

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A Pair of Pears and an Orange Anna McGregor

So Tell Me About the Last Time You Had Sex

Ian Kerner

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So Tell Me About the Last Time You Had Sex Ian Kerner

King Richard

Michael Dobbs

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King Richard Michael Dobbs

Rewilding the Urban Soul

Claire Dunn

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Rewilding the Urban Soul Claire Dunn

All That I Remember About Dean Cola

Tania Chandler

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All That I Remember About Dean Cola Tania Chandler

The Union of Synchronised Swimmers

Cristina Sandu (trans. Cristina Sandu)

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The Union of Synchronised Swimmers Cristina Sandu (tr. Cristina Sandu)

The Ghost In The Garden

Jude Piesse

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The Ghost In The Garden Jude Piesse

I Am the Subway

Kim Hyo-eun (trans. Deborah Smith)

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I Am the Subway Kim Hyo-eun (tr. Deborah Smith)

The Chief Witness

Sayragul Sauytbay (trans. Caroline Waight)

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The Chief Witness Sayragul Sauytbay (tr. Caroline Waight)

Two-Week Wait

Luke Jackson, Kelly Jackson (illus. Mara Wild)

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Two-Week Wait Luke Jackson, Kelly Jackson

A Matter of Death and Life

Irvin D. Yalom, Marilyn Yalom

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A Matter of Death and Life Irvin D. Yalom, Marilyn Yalom

Cop This Lot

ed. Tobias McCorkell

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Cop This Lot ed. Tobias McCorkell

Arno and His Horse

Jane Godwin (illus. Felicita Sala)

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Arno and His Horse Jane Godwin

Plunder

Menachem Kaiser

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Plunder Menachem Kaiser

The Invention of Miracles

Katie Booth

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The Invention of Miracles Katie Booth

Little Brother

Ibrahima Balde, Amets Arzallus Antia (trans. Timberlake Wertenbaker)

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Little Brother Ibrahima Balde, Amets Arzallus Antia (tr. Timberlake Wertenbaker)

Higher Ground

Anke Stelling (trans. Lucy Jones)

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Higher Ground Anke Stelling (tr. Lucy Jones)

Black and Blue

Veronica Gorrie

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Black and Blue Veronica Gorrie

The Walls Came Tumbling Down

Henriette Roosenburg

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The Walls Came Tumbling Down Henriette Roosenburg

Our Hormones, Our Health

Susanne Esche-Belke, Suzann Kirschner-Brouns (trans. Alexandra Roesch)

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Our Hormones, Our Health Susanne Esche-Belke, Suzann Kirschner-Brouns (tr. Alexandra Roesch)

Monsters

Alison Croggon

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Monsters Alison Croggon

We See It All

Jon Fasman

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We See It All Jon Fasman

The Changing of the Guard

Simon Akam

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The Changing of the Guard Simon Akam

The Just

Jan Brokken (trans. David McKay)

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The Just Jan Brokken (tr. David McKay)

A Room Called Earth

Madeleine Ryan

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A Room Called Earth Madeleine Ryan

Jenny Hocking with Geelong Regional Libraries

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Jenny Hocking with Geelong Regional Libraries

Promises to Keep

Joe Biden

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Promises to Keep Joe Biden

The New Climate War

Michael E. Mann

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The New Climate War Michael E. Mann

The Speechwriter

Martin McKenzie-Murray

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The Speechwriter Martin McKenzie-Murray

Literary Lion Tamers

Craig Munro

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Literary Lion Tamers Craig Munro

How We Are Translated

Jessica Gaitán Johannesson

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How We Are Translated Jessica Gaitán Johannesson

The Beach Caves

Trevor Shearston

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The Beach Caves Trevor Shearston

Sex at Dawn

Christopher Ryan, Cacilda Jetha

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Sex at Dawn Christopher Ryan, Cacilda Jetha

Repentance

Alison Gibbs

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Repentance Alison Gibbs

Beowulf

(trans. Maria Dahvana Headley)

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Beowulf (tr. Maria Dahvana Headley)

The Diet Compass

Bas Kast (trans. David Shaw)

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The Diet Compass Bas Kast (tr. David Shaw)

Prosopagnosia

Sònia Hernández (trans. Samuel Rutter)

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Prosopagnosia Sònia Hernández (tr. Samuel Rutter)

#ENTRYLEVELBOSS

Alexa Shoen

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#ENTRYLEVELBOSS Alexa Shoen

Christmas and New Year – online shop

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Christmas and New Year – online shop

Roesch, Alexandra

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Roesch, Alexandra

Damon Young with Avid Reader

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Damon Young with Avid Reader

Scribe and Varuna 2020 fellowships

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Scribe and Varuna 2020 fellowships

SCIENCE / Life Sciences / Biochemistry

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SCIENCE / Life Sciences / Biochemistry

Biogeography

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Biogeography

Biodiversity

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Biodiversity

Biochemistry

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Biochemistry

The Animals in That Country shortlisted for VPLAs

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The Animals in That Country shortlisted for VPLAs

Hyo-eun, Kim

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Hyo-eun, Kim

The Momentous, Uneventful Day

Gideon Haigh

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The Momentous, Uneventful Day Gideon Haigh

Friendly Fire

Ami Ayalon

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Friendly Fire Ami Ayalon

December new releases

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December new releases

Scribe to publish Biden’s original memoir

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Scribe to publish Biden’s original memoir

Biden, Joe

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Biden, Joe

The Eighth Life wins The Warwick Prize for Women in Translation

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The Eighth Life wins The Warwick Prize for Women in Translation

Calleja, Jen

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Calleja, Jen

Edelbauer, Raphaela

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Edelbauer, Raphaela

Ruth Bader Ginsburg

Jane Sherron De Hart

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Ruth Bader Ginsburg Jane Sherron De Hart

Kerner, Ian

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Kerner, Ian

Dobbs, Michael

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Dobbs, Michael

Fiction & related items

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Fiction & related items

Rebecca Giggs wins Nib Award

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Rebecca Giggs wins Nib Award

Smith, Deborah

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Smith, Deborah

Kim, Hyo-eun

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Kim, Hyo-eun

People & places (Children’s / Teenage)

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People & places (Children’s / Teenage)

Transport (Children’s / Teenage)

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Transport (Children’s / Teenage)

The Palace Letters – Events

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The Palace Letters – Events

On Getting Off

Damon Young

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On Getting Off Damon Young

Anemone is not the Enemy

Anna McGregor

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Anemone is not the Enemy Anna McGregor

What Is to Be Done

Barry Jones

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Preface

‘I want to be there when everyone suddenly understands what it has all been for.’
Feodor Dostoevsky, The Brothers Karamazov (1881)

Sleepers, Wake!: technology and the future of work, first published in 1982, was an attempt to describe the impact of technological change, especially the information revolution, on employment, industry, education, and training. I aspired to make a grand synthesis, linking politics, history, economics, science, technology, education, the concept of time-use value, psychology, and information theory.

What Is to Be Done is not an update or a revision—too much has changed since 1982—but a sequel, addressing the massive global changes that have occurred since.

A post-industrial work force, the digital revolution, universal access to higher education, and the emergence of a ‘third age’ after retirement were all novel concepts in 1982, and even after the last revision of the book in 1995. Now we take them for granted, but they did not develop as I had hoped.

There are nearly 5 billion users of the Internet, more than 60 per cent of the world’s population. Our handheld devices have more capacity than the mainframe computers used in the 1969 moon landing, giving us instant access to the world’s intellectual resources.

As well, the United States, the United Kingdom, and Australia have by far the largest cohort of tertiary-qualified citizens in their history. This ought to provide us with an unparalleled capacity to understand the world’s greatest problems—climate change, the refugee crisis, degradation of the environment, poverty, pandemics, the exploitation of women and children, terrorism—with an informed population and inspirational leadership.

However, in the digital age, far from exploring the universal and the long term, both mainstream and social media emphasise the personal, or the tribal, in the short term. Opinion is preferenced over evidence, and feeling over rationality, while science and free enquiry are rejected or discounted. Empathy, the common good, and preserving the planet have low priority.

The planet, notoriously, has no vote.

Homo sapiens has morphed into Homo economicus, because all our politics revolves around production and consumption.

What is sometimes called ‘the Enlightenment project’ has come under sustained attack in the United States, much of Europe, and, to some extent, Australia. Instead, we see a retreat from reason; the rejection of facts and expertise; the rise of populism, snarling nationalisms, tribalism, and conspiracy theories; a fundamentalist revival and hostility to science; a failure of ethical leadership; deepening corruption of democratic processes; profound neglect of the climate-change imperative; and the triumph of vested interests. All are existential threats to civilisation’s advancement and the welfare of humanity here and elsewhere.

The greatest threat to liberal democracy and Enlightenment values has not been external—from ISIS/the Taliban/al-Qaeda, China, Russia, or even pandemics—but internal and self-inflicted.

The four horsemen of the apocalypse that threaten humanity are:

  • population growth exacerbated by per capita resource use;
  • climate change;
  • pandemics; and
  • racism and state violence.

All four are inextricably linked. The pressure on resources, compounded by the threat of climate change, has been a major factor in tribal and racial conflicts over access to water and arable land. Meanwhile, millions of refugees are blamed for seeking security for their families, inequality grows exponentially, pandemics have devastating impacts not only for the aged, but on racial minorities who are stressed by insecurity, leading in turn to violent over-reactions by the custodians of law and order.

Only racism and state violence can be tackled at a national level.

Donald Trump’s election as president of the United States in 2016 was a turning point in modern history. There are far more references to him in this book than to any other person. He has transformed politics beyond recognition—and he has imitators, all over the world.

In the US, the UK, Australia, France, and other European countries, there has been a striking shift in political allegiances, centred on the ‘culture wars’. The cleavage is not on economic issues, but on race, gender, religion, and attitudes to modernity and globalism. People in the higher socioeconomic levels are becoming more progressive, eager to embrace change and take risks; those in the lower levels are more conservative, anxious about change, and risk-averse, seeing themselves as potential victims.

When I began writing What Is to Be Done, the book was to be structured around climate change/global warming and the world’s failure to act. Back in 1982, I was well aware of this threat, and can claim to have been the first Australian politician to have grasped its significance. However, I did not discuss it in Sleepers, Wake!

But as I worked on this manuscript in 2020, new issues kept forcing me to rethink and recalibrate, and they were all inter-related: the coronavirus pandemic, growing inequality, misogyny, the appeal of fundamentalism, the breakdown of constitutional guarantees, state violence, state secrecy, the environmental stress caused by urbanisation and population growth, and gross increases in xenophobia, racism, and intolerance, culminating in the worldwide Black Lives Matter demonstrations. And the economic and social impact of climate change would exacerbate all these problems.

Australia can be outstanding in confronting crises, such as HIV/AIDS, the Global Financial Crisis, COVID-19, and most natural disasters. But its performance was patchy during the long, horrific bushfire season of 2019–20, and it has been woeful in failing to address climate change and transitioning to a post-carbon economy. COVID-19 demonstrated how well the federation could work, and it remains to be seen if this can be maintained in the post-pandemic era.

The better angels of our nature have been well hidden in our politics, with our part-time parliaments, the absence of serious debate, revolving-door prime ministerships, venality, vindictiveness, mediocrity, secrecy, and the influence of vested interests.

Science (medical science excepted) is on the retreat, and the universities are under attack.

I have often used Australian examples to illustrate my arguments, because it is the country I know best, and the evidence is at hand. Nevertheless, my analysis is generally applicable to all technologically dependent societies, especially the United States, Great Britain, France, Germany, Canada, and New Zealand.

Citizens everywhere must engage in the great issues, and work together to master evidence and develop our capacity to define, debate, and decide. Without it, our fellow humans will be staring into an abyss.

Despite all this, we have to be optimistic that we will have the wisdom, courage, and skill to save the planet—and ourselves. It’s the only way to go.

What Is to Be Done Barry Jones

November new releases

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November new releases

Best Australian Political Cartoons 2020

ed. Russ Radcliffe

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Best Australian Political Cartoons 2020 ed. Russ Radcliffe

What Is Life?

Paul Nurse

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What Is Life? Paul Nurse

The Palace Letters

Jenny Hocking

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The Palace Letters Jenny Hocking

Scribe to publish its first graphic novel

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Scribe to publish its first graphic novel

The Bridge – Fifty Years On

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The Bridge – Fifty Years On

City on Fire longlisted for Walkley

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City on Fire longlisted for Walkley

Tiberius with a Telephone

Patrick Mullins

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Tiberius with a Telephone Patrick Mullins

A conversation with Clarissa Goenawan

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A conversation with Clarissa Goenawan

Waight, Caroline

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Waight, Caroline

Sauytbay, Sayragul

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Sauytbay, Sayragul

FICTION / Romance / Multicultural & Interracial

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FICTION / Romance / Multicultural & Interracial

FICTION / Holidays

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FICTION / Holidays

FICTION / Friendship

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FICTION / Friendship

Rosencrantz, Eric

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Rosencrantz, Eric

Faraut, Brice

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Faraut, Brice

Dunn, Claire

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Dunn, Claire

Roesch, Alex

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Roesch, Alex

Kirschner-Brouns, Suzann

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Kirschner-Brouns, Suzann

Esche-Belke, Susanne

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Esche-Belke, Susanne

Sale, Anna

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Sale, Anna

Harvey, Nicola

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Harvey, Nicola

SELF-HELP / Spiritual

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SELF-HELP / Spiritual

NATURE / Ecosystems & Habitats / Wilderness

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NATURE / Ecosystems & Habitats / Wilderness

SPORTS & RECREATION / Outdoor Skills

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SPORTS & RECREATION / Outdoor Skills