'…the cheapest thing in Australia is the girls'

Young Women in Townsville 1942–45

Authors

  • Eileen M. Hennessey

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.1017/S1321816600000519

Keywords:

Australian foreign policy, 1942–45, Japanese advance, national defence

Abstract

Australian foreign policy reached a watershed in late 1941/early 1942. As the Japanese continued their rapid advance through Southeast Asia and into New Guinea, apprehensive Australians believed their country could be next. The government also knew their traditional ally Britain would not come to their aid should the Japanese invade Australia, and as most of their own forces were already out of the country, the remainder would have provided a totally inadequate defence. For Prime Minister Curtin and his advisers it was America that had to provide protection for Australia; both for its own sake, and as the base from which the Japanese advance through the Eastern Pacific rim from North to South could be halted.

Author Biography

  • Eileen M. Hennessey

    EILEEN HENNESSEY is currently engaged in research towards her PhD thesis focusing on the experiences of Australian women in the Malay Peninsula and Singapore during the 1948-60 'Emergency'.

References

Focault, Michael. The History of Sexuality, Volume 1. Trans. R. Hurley. London, 1979.

Moore, J.H. Over-Sexed, Over-Paid and Over Here. Brisbane: UQP, 1981.

Potts, A. and Potts, E. D.. Yanks Down Under, 1941–45. Melbourne, 1985.

Potts, A. and Strauss, L. For the Love of a Soldier. Sydney, 1987.

Saunders, K. and Taylor, H.. ‘To Combat the Plague: The Construction of Moral Alarm and State Intervention in Queensland during World War II’. Hecate 14 (1988):5–30.

Wilson, P.D. North Queensland: World War II, 1942–1945. Brisbane, 1988.

Published

1994-06-01

Issue

Section

Articles

How to Cite

Hennessey, E. M. (1994). ’…the cheapest thing in Australia is the girls’: Young Women in Townsville 1942–45. Queensland Review, 1(1), 61-70. https://doi.org/10.1017/S1321816600000519