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Book Cover
Book
Author Read, Peter, 1945-

Title Returning to nothing : the meaning of lost places / Peter Read
Published Cambridge ; Melbourne : Cambridge University Press, 1996

Copies

Location Call no. Vol. Availability
 W'PONDS  155.935 Rea/Rtn  AVAILABLE
 MELB  155.935 Rea/Rtn  AVAILABLE
Description xiv, 240 pages ; 23 cm
Contents 1. Losing Windermere station -- 2. Vanished homelands -- 3. Namadgi: sharing the high country -- 4. Two dead towns -- 5. Home: the heart of the matter -- 6. Empty spaces: the inundation of Lake Pedder -- 7. Darwin rebuilt -- 8. Losing a neighbourhood -- 9. That place
Summary This book examines what it means to lose a place forever and why we return, and keep on returning, to the places that remain in our memories. Returning to Nothing considers lost countries, towns, suburbs and homes: Darwin after Cyclone Tracy, the flooding of the town of Adaminaby in New South Wales, the inundation of Lake Pedder in Tasmania, bushfire at Macedon in Victoria, migration from other countries, the clearing of neighbourhoods for freeways and the everyday circumstances which force people from their land. The memories and powerful attachments to places of significance, and the struggles to save them, fill the pages of this moving book
Notes Includes index
Bibliography Bibliography: pages 224-235
Subject Cyclone Tracy, 1974.
Environmental psychology.
Extinct cities -- Psychological aspects.
Landscape changes -- Australia -- Psychological aspects.
Landscape changes -- Australia.
Grief -- Australia.
Loss (Psychology)
Natural disasters -- Australia -- Psychological aspects.
Home -- Psychological aspects.
LC no. 96016590
ISBN 0521571545
0521576997 (paperback)