Land and Country
Rethinking Identity on a Changing Planet
Format:Hardback
Publisher:Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Publishing:26th Nov '26
£55.00
This title is due to be published on 26th November, and will be despatched as soon as possible.

Land and Country brings philosophical thinking into direct engagement with Australia’s public debates on national identity, drawing on the author’s own family history of convict descent.
Land and Country brings philosophical thought into direct engagement with Australia’s contested debates on identity, sovereignty, and belonging.
Drawing on the author’s family history of convict descent, and expounding on the thorny and variegated web of relations that determine the Australian past and present, this book traces the intersection of ancestral lives with the violence of settlement: land grants on stolen Country, frontier conflict, the Appin massacre, and the shifting cultural meanings of convict shame and pride. Beneath these stories lies a deeper inquiry: what does it mean to pursue family history as an act of truth-telling in a nation still struggling to reckon with its own past?
Interweaving political philosophy, feminist critique, and intellectual history, Lloyd examines the conceptual frameworks that continue to shape national debate – whiteness and multiculturalism; Enlightenment ideas of property and progress; the emotional dynamics of guilt, shame, pride, and responsibility; and the colonial mindset that persists in public discourse. She brings Locke, Kant and Spinoza into dialogue with Indigenous critiques of sovereignty, and explores how contemporary First Nations storytelling and visual practice unsettle colonial narratives and offer new imaginative “entry points” into shared truths about Country, climate change, and coexistence.
This intervention from one of Australia’s most eminent contemporary philosophers is especially germane in the wake of the rejection of the 2023 referendum on a constitutionally enshrined indigenous ‘Voice’ to government: its principal objective is to make a philosophical contribution to the path towards indigenous recognition and national reconciliation. Part memoir, part philosophy, part cultural criticism, this book offers a compelling contribution to ongoing truth-telling, and to the still-unfinished task of imagining a just future between First Nations and non-Indigenous Australians.
Land and Country is a decolonial tour de force by one of Australia’s most respected Continental philosophers. Embarking on a painful autoethnography informed by the genocidal actions of her forebears, Genevieve Lloyd undertakes a reflexive interrogation of the collective imaginings and conceptual formations that structure how our colonial legacy is lived in present-day Australia. Into the dark history of the colonial dispossession of Indigenous Peoples, Land and Country shines an unwavering light to reveal conceptual genealogies of issues currently under contested political deliberation and public debate. The outcome is a powerful social critique of the present, laying bare the persistent recalcitrance of non-Indigenous Australia’s refusal to engage with contemporary Indigenous demands for justice in the form of truth-telling, treaty and a representative voice within the postcolonial political system.
~ Simone Bignall, author of Postcolonial Agency: Critique and Constructivism and Research Professor in Jumbunna Institute at the University of Technology Sydney.
ISBN: 9781350610422
Dimensions: unknown
Weight: unknown
192 pages