Bradstow:
a study of status, class and power in a small Australian town.
We would never have known that moving into Bowral we had gone into the lion’s den of a pathologically conservative society. Not that it matters much at this stage. We say ‘good-morning’ or give a nod of acknowledgement to the friendly people walking their dog around the Bradman oval. Most of them have a little plastic bag tied onto the dog-lead in which to scoop up any substance excreted by their massive Labrador or ‘tiger’ terriers. We don’t carry any bag because Milo is discreet and sensitive enough to wait till he sees a spot well hidden from any possible feet treading into it. Even then he tries gallantly to bury it with a furious and lengthy back scratching of leaves and soil. “Good boy, Milo, well done.”
By accident I found out that back in 1974 there was an ABC 4 corners program done by a Peter Reid on the Bowral society and it’s dearly held conservative values. It was based on a book by R.G Wild called “Bradstow.” The program was well received according to a friend who keeps a keen eye out on those sort of part social and part academic community studies.
It turns out later that the professor, R.G Wild at La Trobe University who had based his PH.D on anthropology studies done at Sydney University, was found to have plagiarized large tracts of a book. In 1985 a book of his, An Introduction to Sociological Perspectives, was published by Allen and Unwin. It was not long before several academics noticed
that extensive passages from the book were taken, without sufficient
acknowledgement, directly from other sources. Publicity about this led Allen and
Unwin to withdraw the book, and eventually La Trobe set up an inquiry into the
apparent plagiarism. In 1986, Wild resigned and hence the incomplete inquiry was
disbanded. Wild soon obtained a high-paying job at Hedland College of Technical
and Further Education, It became the ‘scandal of the century’. He went on to publish a few more books on Social Stratification in Australian society and the perceived class-less society.
Here is an abstract of this study.
Abstract
This study revisits the Southern Highlands community of Bowral (NSW), the subject of Ronald Wild’s political examination in the late 1960s.
The paper commences with an assessment of changes in the local political economy, comparing contemporary socio-economic indicators and electoral data with Wild’s findings. Little change is revealed in the patterns of social stratification or conservative political dominance between the two periods.
In Wild’s study elite theories were employed to explain the endurance of conservative parties in Bowral’s inequitable social environment. The local working classes were accordingly cast as a passive, apathetic and ignorant lot, politically beholden to the local gentry and their class allies. This paper argues that these theories do not adequately explain why a social class seemingly votes against its interests.
The lived experiences of Bowral’s working classes received minimal attention in Wild’s study. For the working classes, particularly the more isolated and resource starved constituents of rural Australia, the politics of survival closely shadows the world of electoral politics. A deeper understanding of the hidden politics of everyday life is crucial to our understanding of Australia’s capitalist democracy.
This paper highlights the bias in Australian political studies which continues to render much of contemporary working class politics invisible. It argues for studies in the political economy of everyday life to inform class analyses of communities, as an important adjunct to studies of institutionalised power

Found study interesting. Have connections to early pioneers in town.
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I think that Gerard and Helvi had some fun with ‘Let Asylum Seekers Pull Their Weight’ over at the Drum!
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There were also some other’ older (long time) Drummers, like Hung, Miowarra, Unter Uber, Julian, jaycee….. LOL
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Were you there? under what pseudo, as I did not see Big M…
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No, I was reading it this morning…sometimes I can’t be bothered getting into an argument!
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Actually, I was busy arguing with some mouth breathers at The Conversation!
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Been known to throw in a couple of newbies myself.
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Yes, that is true. They are nice and also keep saying about everything, oh, nice and after another biscuit, oh, how nice.
But like Fawlty towers; don’t mention boat people or Gillard. As for Bolt et Co. They love him. Oh, nice, so nice. How’s the garden going, nice, nice!
Still , nothing wrong with being nice. Rather that, than 2 fingers up.
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“The roses are particularly beautiful this year”.
This following on a gang of three lavishing the roses for the last year with unguents and feed and pruning and loving conversation for who else is there that’s quite got the time and is (really, truly) as nice…
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I remember our learned friend Geoffrey talking about this book and asking why we wanted to live in this Bluest of Blue places. My reply was that it was because it is the greenest of green places, and the people are actually very nice…
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How I am interested. I am experiencing “nice” helvi up to a point in Bordertown and some of it is horrendous…
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By nice, I mean, neighbourly, civil… we get invitations to have drinks, to gallery openings, dinners etc. Shop owners are friendly, on our Milo walks we always have a chat with someone…we have barbecues together, we borrow each others books, take neighbours dog for walk….and more 🙂
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There’s nothing like walking a dog to find friendly people. We all got to see a different side of Malcolm Turnbull, when he wrote that eulogy to his departed dog, over at the ABC!
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Yes, i thought the same about MT, also his mum leaving him and dad, would not have been easy, then on top of that having to go to a boarding school…makes you vulnerable.
Of course I liked it that he replied to TWO of my posts on UL 🙂
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The pup is always the best arbiter of a person’s quality. Had some dinners guests tonight, Fergus made a big fuss of them at the door, sat under the table all evening, then bade them farewell. All good people!
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I can imagine that of Bowral helvi that there is a neighbourly vibe. It really is wonderful you have a patch there. Those sorts of nice things are really nice.
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Nise makes life, well nicer, nasty takes away from it and nasty also hurst, why do some folks have need for nastiness, not nice
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hurts
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