Author | Robert Hughes |
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Subject | History of Australia |
Publisher | Alfred A. Knopf |
Publication date | 1986 |
Media type | hardback |
Pages | 688 |
Awards | Duff Cooper Prize 1987[1] WH Smith Literary Award 1988[2] |
ISBN | 0-394-50668-5 First Knopf edition |
The Fatal Shore: The Epic of Australia's Founding is a 1986 book by Robert Hughes. It provides a history of the early years of British colonisation of Australia, and especially the history and social effects of Britain's convict transportation system. It also addresses the historical, political and sociological reasons that led to British settlement. It was first published in 1986.
Hughes was an Australian man who became an internationally well-known art critic, living in Europe and then New York, where he became art critic for Time magazine. Hughes's interest in Australia's convict era began in the early 1970s, when he was filming a TV documentary about the history of Australian art that took him to Port Arthur in Tasmania.[3]