The brilliant boy : Doc Evatt and the great Australian dissent / Gideon Haigh.
2021
BIO EVAT.h 2021
Available at Brisbane
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Details
Title
The brilliant boy : Doc Evatt and the great Australian dissent / Gideon Haigh.
Author
Cover Title
©2021
ISBN
9781760856113 hardback
Imprint
Cammeray, N.S.W. : Scribner, an imprint of Simon and Schuster Australia, 2021.
Language
English
Description
378 pages, 8 unnumbered pages of plates : portraits (some colour) ; 24 cm
Call Number
BIO EVAT.h 2021
Summary
In a quiet Sydney street in 1937, a seven year-old immigrant boy drowned in a ditch that had filled with rain after being left unfenced by council workers. How the law should deal with the trauma of the family’s loss was one of the most complex and controversial cases to reach Australia’s High Court, where it seized the imagination of its youngest and cleverest member. These days, ‘Doc’ Evatt is remembered mainly as the hapless and divisive opposition leader during the long ascendancy of his great rival Sir Robert Menzies. Yet long before we spoke of ‘public intellectuals’, Evatt was one: a dashing advocate, an inspired jurist, an outspoken opinion maker, one of our first popular historians and the nation’s foremost champion of modern art. Through Evatt’s innovative and empathic decision in Chester v the Council of Waverley Municipality, which argued for the law to acknowledge inner suffering as it did physical injury, Gideon Haigh rediscovers the most brilliant Australian of his day, a patriot with a vision of his country charting its own path and being its own example – the same attitude he brought to being the only Australian president of the UN General Assembly, and instrumental in the foundation of Israel. - Publisher's website.
Note
Jacket photograph: Courtesy of the Evatt family.
Bibliography, etc. Note
Includes bibliographical references.
Formatted Contents Note
1. 'How I yearn for them and can't forget!'
2. 'Let turth and falsehood grapple'
3. 'The legal Phar Lap'
4. 'The extreme gradualness of inevitability'
5. A good kick in the arse for the old guard'
6. 'Only one's sense of duty prevents public scandal'
7. "He can do what he wants'
8. 'Who is my neighbour?'
9. "The apparently trivial case of telling significance'
10. "The agony of hope and fear'
11. "Hell-bent on re-entering politics'
Epilogue 'Justice is the thing'
Acknowledgements
Bibliography
Photo credits.
2. 'Let turth and falsehood grapple'
3. 'The legal Phar Lap'
4. 'The extreme gradualness of inevitability'
5. A good kick in the arse for the old guard'
6. 'Only one's sense of duty prevents public scandal'
7. "He can do what he wants'
8. 'Who is my neighbour?'
9. "The apparently trivial case of telling significance'
10. "The agony of hope and fear'
11. "Hell-bent on re-entering politics'
Epilogue 'Justice is the thing'
Acknowledgements
Bibliography
Photo credits.
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