2012
DOI: 10.5263/labourhistory.102.0087
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Are We ‘All Socialists Now’? New Liberalism, State Socialism and the Australian Settlement

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“…This 'socialism' indicated a second source upon which Coghlan drew in formulating the breadwinner. In late nineteenth-century Australia, as in Britain, socialism was a highly contested term that could capture competing intellectual projects (Tregenza 2012). The antagonist of socialism was usually not capitalism, but individualism; however, it could also register a process for dialectally mediating between the individual and the collective of the state.…”
Section: Coghlan's Breadwinner and National Wealthmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…This 'socialism' indicated a second source upon which Coghlan drew in formulating the breadwinner. In late nineteenth-century Australia, as in Britain, socialism was a highly contested term that could capture competing intellectual projects (Tregenza 2012). The antagonist of socialism was usually not capitalism, but individualism; however, it could also register a process for dialectally mediating between the individual and the collective of the state.…”
Section: Coghlan's Breadwinner and National Wealthmentioning
confidence: 99%