Mary Booth: The Woman Who Shaped the Anzac Legend

Author:   Raelene Frances ,  Bruce Scates
Publisher:   Melbourne University Press
ISBN:  

9780522880717


Pages:   384
Publication Date:   17 March 2026
Format:   Paperback
Availability:   In Print   Availability explained
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Mary Booth: The Woman Who Shaped the Anzac Legend


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Author:   Raelene Frances ,  Bruce Scates
Publisher:   Melbourne University Press
Imprint:   Melbourne University Press
ISBN:  

9780522880717


ISBN 10:   0522880711
Pages:   384
Publication Date:   17 March 2026
Audience:   College/higher education ,  Postgraduate, Research & Scholarly
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   In Print   Availability explained
This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us.

Table of Contents

Reviews

""Like many quiet revolutionaries, Mary Booth was both of, and ahead of, her time. In this brilliantly creative reconstruction of Dr Booth's life, career and causes, Bruce Scates and Raelene Frances rethink the history of Australian feminism, philanthropy, Anzac commemoration and national identity. They have rescued from undeserved obscurity a formidably talented and energetic woman who deserves an honoured place in the story of how Australia became modern."" - Professor Frank Bongiorno AM, University of Canberra ""This is a wonderful exploration of a challenging and enigmatic subject - Mary Booth, who lived such a long and active life from mid 19th to mid 20th century. In tracing the life of a woman who was so many things - pioneer female doctor, feminist activist, welfare worker, ardent supporter of empire, environmentalist, and nurturer of Anzac commemoration - Mary Booth brings to life a time very different from, but also foundational to, our own. Each chapter is a major study of an important aspect of Australian history - university education for women, medical services for children, the First World War on the home front, and much more. I loved the combination of immersive detail and wide-ranging analysis every step of the way. The chapter on the Soldiers' Club, founded and managed by Mary Booth - surely one of the best accounts we have of returning soldiers during and after the First World War - is just one example."" - Honorary Professor Ann Curthoys, AM, University of Sydney. ""'Mary Booth is a pioneering biography of a leading but forgotten Australian social reformer, physician, feminist, patriot, and British Empire advocate who promoted a myriad of causes including support for soldiers of the First World War. Eloquently written and meticulously researched, Mary Booth is a compelling and riveting account which beautifully evokes a period of great social and cultural change in Australia. It captures with powerful clarity and formidable insight Booth's central and vital role in influencing and shaping this change during the first decades of the twentieth century."" - Professor Joy Damousi, AM, University of Melbourne ""The research is prodigious, the writing sparkles. Brilliantly contextualised, this book is a delight to read."" - Dr Michael McKernan, Former Deputy Director of the Australian War Memorial. ""Mary Booth exemplified the wide span of Federation-era feminism - political conservatives were modern women too. Her life is skilfully told by two of Australia's best women's and social historians."" - Emeritus Professor Angela Woollacott, Australian National University.


Author Information

Bruce Scates is a Fulbright Scholar and Emeritus Professor of History at the Australian National University. He has pioneered new forms of life writing, published widely on the culture of commemoration and the human cost of war, and is a major contributor to debates in social, labour and gender history. Raelene Frances is Emeritus Professor of History at the Australian National University. She is internationally recognised for her contributions to social, gender and labour history, particularly to the understanding of the intersections between work, gender, class and war.

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