'Keith Windschuttle' (born
1942) is an
Australian
writer,
historian and
ABC board member who has authored several books from the 1970s onwards. These include ''Unemployment'' (1979) which analyses the
economic causes and
social consequences of
unemployment in Australia and advocates a
socialist response, ''The Media: a New Analysis of the Press, Television, Radio and Advertising in Australia'' (1984) on the
political economy and content of the
news and
entertainment media, ''The Killing of History'', (1994), a critique of
postmodernism in
history, ''The Fabrication of Aboriginal History: Volume One: Van Diemen's Land 1803-1847'' (2002) which accuses a number of Australian historians of falsifying and inventing the degree of
violence in the past, and ''The White Australia Policy'' (2004), a history of that policy which argues that academic historians have exaggerated the degree of
racism in Australian history.
Biography
After education at
Canterbury Boys High School (where he was a contemporary of current
Liberal Australian prime minister John Howard), Windschuttle was a journalist on newspapers and magazines in Sydney. He completed a BA (first class honours in history) at the
University of Sydney in
1969, and an MA (honours in politics) at
Macquarie University in
1978. In
1973, he became
tutor in Australian history at the
University of New South Wales (UNSW). Between
1977 and
1981, Windschuttle was
lecturer in Australian history and in
journalism at the New South Wales Institute of Technology, now
University of Technology, Sydney before returning to UNSW in
1983 as lecturer/senior lecturer in social policy. He resigned from UNSW in 1993. Since then he has been
publisher of
Macleay Press and a regular visiting and guest lecturer on history and
historiography at
American universities. In June 2006 he was appointed to the Board of the
Australian Broadcasting Corporation (ABC), Australia's non-commercial public
broadcaster.
Political evolution
An adherent of the
New Left in the 1960s and 70s, Windschuttle later moved to the right. This process is first evident in his 1984 book ''The Media'', which was highly critical of the then academically fashionable Marxist theories of
Louis Althusser and
Stuart Hall. Windschuttle criticised these writers from the same empirical perspective as
marxist historian E. P. Thompson in Thompson's book 'The Poverty of Theory'. The first edition of 'The Media' attacked "the political program of the New Right" and set out a case favouring "government restrictions and regulation" and condemning "private enterprise and free markets"
[1].However, the third edition in 1988 took a different view: "Overall, the major economic reforms of the last five years, the deregulation of the finance sector, and the imposition of wage restraint through the social contract of The Accord, have worked to expand employment and internationalize the Australian economy in more positive ways than I thought possible at the time."
This political evolution has continued since the early 1990s. In ''The Killing of History'', Windschuttle defended the practices and methods of traditional
empirical history against
postmodernism, and praised historians such as
Henry Reynolds. He currently argues that although at the time he believed that those left-wing historians he praised relied on traditional
empirically-oriented approaches, he has subsequently discovered by checking their
primary sources that some did not.
His principal argument, evident in ''The Killing of History'', is that historians on both the left and right of the political spectrum have misrepresented and distorted history to support various political causes or ideological positions. With respect to
Australian Aboriginal history, in ''The Fabrication of Aboriginal History'' he argues that it has been left-wing historians who have extensively misrepresented and fabricated historical evidence to support a political agenda.
Windschuttle argues that the task of the historian is to attempt to provide the reader with an empirical history as near to the
objective truth as possible, based on analysis of all the available evidence. The political implications of an objective, empirical history are not the empirical historian's responsibility. A historian may have his or her own political beliefs but this should never lead them to falsify historical evidence.
However, critics such as the contributors to ''Whitewash'', have argued that Windschuttle does not follow his own criteria as, in their view, his work invariably produces findings consistent with his political views. The contributors to ''Whitewash'' include historians whom Windschuttle has directly criticised for "fabricating" history. The key issue is whether the historical evidence, viewed objectively, supports the historical arguments made by Windschuttle or those of the historians he has criticised.
A frequent contributor to conservative magazines ''
Quadrant'' and ''
The New Criterion'', Windschuttle's recent research disputes whether the
colonial settlers of Australia committed widespread
genocide against the
Indigenous Australians and denies the claims by some
left-wing historians that there was a campaign of
guerrilla warfare against
British settlement. Extensive debate on his claims has come to be called the
History Wars. He argues against assertions, which he imputes to the current generation of academic historians, that there was any resemblance between racial attitudes in Australia and those of
South Africa under
apartheid and
Germany under the
Nazis.
''The Fabrication of Aboriginal History''
''The Fabrication of Aboriginal History, Volume One: Van Diemen's Land 1803-1847'' is a review of published research on the history of violence between indigenous Australians and white colonists. The book focuses primarily on
Tasmanian history and the
massacres and violence reported there. Windschuttle denies many of the claims made by historians such as
Henry Reynolds and
Lyndall Ryan. In reviewing the
citations made by historians, he claims that many are inaccurate, misleading, falsified and sometimes invented. In a number of cases, the primary sources
footnoted do not support the claims made in the text. He argues that the colonial settlers of Australia did not commit widespread
massacres against
Indigenous Australians, and that there was not a campaign of
guerrilla warfare against British settlement. His review focuses in large part on the
Black War against the
Aborigines of Tasmania.
Windschuttle's claims and research have been the subject of a series of
rebuttals and counter-rebuttals. The best known is ''Whitewash. On Keith Windschuttle's Fabrication of Aboriginal History'', an anthology edited and introduced by
Robert Manne, professor of politics at
La Trobe University, with contributions from other Australian historians. Another book, ''Washout: On the academic response to The Fabrication of Aboriginal History'' by Melbourne freelance writer John Dawson, argues that ''Whitewash'' leaves Windschuttle's claims and research unrefuted.
At the time of the publication of Volume One, it was announced that a second volume would covering New South Wales and Queensland. On
20 January 2006, Windschuttle was reported as saying that this volume would be published "within twelve months".
[1].
Major publications
★ ''Unemployment: a Social and Political Analysis of the Economic Crisis in Australia'', Penguin, (
1979)
★ ''Fixing the News'', Cassell, (
1981)
★ ''The Media: a New Analysis of the Press, Television, Radio and Advertising in Australia'', Penguin, (
1984, 3rd edn.
1988)
★ ''Working in the Arts'', University of Queensland Press, (
1986)
★ ''Local Employment Initiatives: Integrating Social Labour Market and Economic Objectives for Innovative Job Creation'', Australian Government Publishing Service, (
1987)
★ ''Writing, Researching Communicating'', McGraw-Hill, (
1988, 3rd edn.
1999)
★ ''The Killing of History: How a Discipline is being Murdered by Literary Critics and Social Theorists'', Macleay Press, Sydney (
1994); Macleay Press, Michigan (
1996); Free Press, New York (
1997); Encounter Books, San Francisco (
2000)
★ ''The Fabrication of Aboriginal History, Volume One: Van Diemen's Land 1803-1847'', Macleay Press, (
2002)
★ ''The White Australia Policy'', Macleay Press, (
2004)
References
1. http://www.theage.com.au/articles/2002/12/23/1040511005690.html
Articles
★ ''
Contra Windschuttle'', S.G. Foster 'Quadrant', March 2003, 47:3
★ ''The Whole Truth...?'', P. Francis, 'The Journal of GEOS', 2000
★ ''Whitewash confirms the Fabrication of Aboriginal History'', Keith Windschuttle, 'Quadrant', October 2003
[2]
★ ''The return of postmodernism in Aboriginal history'', Keith Windschuttle, 'Quadrant', April 2006
[3]
External links
★
SydneyLine website - recent articles and lectures by Sydney author and publisher, Keith Windschuttle, plus other works and links that pursue similar interests and are conceived within the same tradition
★
★
The Real Stuff of History
★
ABC Board bio