Believing on Upside Down Country
The Changing Faith-scape of Bendigo
Authored by: Jennifer JonesPlease read Conditions of use before downloading the formats.
Description
The city of Bendigo and surrounds, in central Victoria, Australia, is described today by its Traditional Owners, the Djaara people, as ‘upside down country’, because since 1851 the sacred earth has been rotated and removed by mining, changing its spiritual ‘faith-scape’. Since the arrival of settlers and sojourners of European and Chinese descent, relations between peoples in this region have been powerfully shaped not only by the quest for gold and subsequent bases of material wealth, but also by developments in this religious and spiritual faith-scape. In this innovative study, the authors examine a range of historically distinctive Bendigo customs, rituals, activities and events, from the famous Easter Fair, saved for posterity by the intervention of a Chinese community figure in the 1870s, and now led each year by Djaara people, to demonstrations associated with the Bendigo mosque controversy of 2014. They find that an understanding of spirituality and belief has often been a strong basis for connecting with and showing humanity towards others. Drawing on both oral sources and the objects and spaces of the material culture of religion and belief, the authors provide a fascinating elucidation of past and present meanings of faith, in and around Bendigo, as a lived dimension of experience.
Details
- ISBN (print):
- 9781760467272
- ISBN (online):
- 9781760467289
- Publication date:
- Apr 2026
- Imprint:
- ANU Press
- DOI:
- http://doi.org/10.22459/BUDC.2026
- Disciplines:
- Arts & Humanities: Cultural Studies, History
- Countries:
- Australia
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- Preliminary pages (PDF, 114 KB)
- List of illustrations (PDF, 132 KB)
- Acknowledgments (PDF, 128 KB)
- About the authors (PDF, 139 KB)
- Introduction (PDF, 397 KB)
- Religion and social cohesion on the goldfields (PDF, 202 KB) doi
- Djaara resilience amid disruption: The impact of settler actions on Aboriginal connections to Country (PDF, 854 KB) doi
- Common law and religious difference in Bendigo courtrooms: ‘The Chinese Oath’ (PDF, 217 KB) doi
- Popout One: Giving as cohesion: ‘Hospital Sundays’, religion, and medical philanthropy in fin-de-siècle Bendigo (PDF, 172 KB) doi
- Jewish, British, middle-class: A history of Jewish adjustment on the Central Victorian Goldfields (PDF, 1.5 MB) doi
- Popout Two: Spatial organisation and hierarchies of prejudice in Central Victorian goldrush cemeteries (PDF, 340 KB) doi
- Divine intention and family misfortune on the Central Victorian Goldfields: How ‘Providence orders all things well’ (PDF, 254 KB) doi
- Building an Irish-Roman Catholic Church on the goldfields and Northern Victoria, 1852–1914 (PDF, 381 KB) doi
- Popout Three: Interfaith marriage and Jewish familial identity on the Central Victorian Goldfields: The Herman family experience (PDF, 157 KB) doi
- Militant Protestant sectarianism in a religiously plural community: Why Bendigo failed to become a ‘Protestant city’ (PDF, 239 KB) doi
- Faith after the gold rush: Demographic and religious change (PDF, 304 KB) doi
- Popout Four: Completing the Sacred Heart Cathedral: Craft and tradition in Bendigo’s faith‑scape (PDF, 313 KB) doi
- Popout Five: Emu Point Joss House: The spirit and architecture of faith (PDF, 305 KB) doi
- Popout Six: Transforming ‘Old Sandhurst Town’ into the Great Stupa of Universal Compassion (PDF, 358 KB) doi
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