Nick Cater

Nicholas Charles Cater (born 7 July 1958) is a British-born Australian journalist and author who writes on culture and politics. He is a columnist for The Australian newspaper. Cater’s book The Lucky Culture[1] has been compared to Donald Horne’s The Lucky Country[2] for its substance and influence.

Career

Cater was born in Billericay, Essex[3] and grew up in Hythe near Southampton.[4] His parents were teachers. He graduated from the University of Exeter with an honours degree in sociology in 1980 and drove laundry vans for a year before joining the BBC as a trainee studio manager.[5] He worked as a producer in the London bureau of Australia’s Channel Seven from 1983 to 1986 before rejoining the BBC as a journalist. He produced and directed the documentary Bridge Builders comparing the construction of the Tyne and Sydney Harbour Bridges. Cater migrated to Australia in July 1989 where he joined Rupert Murdoch’s News Corp Australia, then News Limited. He worked on The Advertiser in Adelaide and became group Asia correspondent in 1993, where he was best known for tracking down paedophile Robert 'Dolly' Dunn, reported on the front page of The Daily Telegraph under the headline "Hello Dolly" on 17 April 1996.[6] Cater worked in senior editorial roles at The Daily Telegraph and The Sunday Telegraph[7] in Sydney before joining The Australian in 2004.[8] He was appointed Editor of The Weekend Australian in 2007. Cater left The Australian in September 2013, but continues to write a weekly column.[9]

In 2014, Cater was appointed Executive Director of the Menzies Research Centre.[10] He has co-edited with Helen Baxendale a selection of the writings of Christopher Pearson under the title A Better Class of Sunset, with introductions by Tony Abbott and Jack Snelling.[11] He has contributed 'Barons versus bureaucrats: the history of the grain trade in North America and Australia' to "Only in Australia. The History, Politics and Economics of Australian Exceptionalism", to be published by Oxford University Press in 2016, which he has co-authored with Henry Ergas and Geoffrey Blainey (among others).

The Lucky Culture

The Lucky Culture and the Rise of an Australian Ruling Class was described as a manifesto for a counter revolution against the age of political correctness by Peter Coleman who wrote "every 50 years or so Australians need a new book marking the end of an era and the start of a new one."[2]

Two Australian prime ministers launched the book at separate events. John Howard endorsed the book in Sydney[12] and it was given a qualified endorsement by Kevin Rudd in Brisbane [13] two months later. Former Australian Prime Minister, Tony Abbott, described The Lucky Culture as a "beautifully written and perceptive… historical essay."[14] Among others who greeted the book favourably are Boris Johnson,[15] Geoffrey Blainey,[16] Miranda Devine,[17] Keith Windschuttle,[18] Janet Albrechtsen,[19] Julie Bishop and Jack Snelling. Chris Bowen[20] and Peter Craven[21] gave qualified endorsements. Former Labor leader Mark Latham was among the book’s leading critics, writing: "It takes a fair bit to offend me these days but Nick Cater’s new book The Lucky Culture and the Rise of an Australian Ruling Class has done the trick."[22] Former Labor speechwriter Bob Ellis called for the book to be pulped, calling it as "a loathsome shallow Murdochist piece of Pommy filth."[2]

Other critics include journalist Guy Rundle of Crikey[23] and historian Frank Bongiorno. In his critique Bongiorno dispelled comparisons between Cater’s work and that of Horne's seminal book, writing that the title of Cater’s book "will not enter the Australian lexicon in the way Horne’s has done... nor, I strongly suspect, will anyone still be talking about The Lucky Culture half a century hence, except as an indication of the intellectual poverty of the Australian right in the early twenty-first century".[24]

Cater has been commissioned by HarperCollins to write a second book for publication in 2015, provisionally titled Delusions: A History of Bad Ideas. Cater was editor of the 2006 book, The Howard Factor,[25] a review of the first decade of the John Howard government.

References

  1. The Book - THE LUCKY CULTURE
  2. 1 2 3 'Australian Notes', Peter Coleman, The Spectator, 4 May 2013.
  3. Thatcher’s Utopian Dreaming Ruined My Education, 19 April 2013
  4. The Lucky Culture and the Rise of an Australian Ruling Class, Nick Cater, 2013, p.2
  5. The end of an era at Bush House
  6. Diplomatic impunity, Sydney Morning Herald, 23 January 2004
  7. Nick Cater - The Wheeler Centre
  8. Welcome to Oz, where no one rules, Spiked Online, 22 April 2013
  9. Nick Cater bids farewell to The Australian, The Australian, 9 September 2013
  10. New Executive Director, Menzies Research Centre
  11. A Better Class of Sunset: Collected Works of Christopher Pearson
  12. John Howard Launches The Lucky Culture, 8 May 2013
  13. KEVIN RUDD LAUNCHES THE LUCKY CULTURE IN BRISBANE
  14. Progress and its critics, Tony Abbott, The Spectator, 27 April 2013
  15. Boris Johnson interviewed by Jon Faine, 774 ABC Melbourne, 23 August 2013
  16. Launch of The Lucky Culture and the Rise of an Australian Ruling Class by Nick Cater, Geoffrey Blainey, speech, 13 May 2013
  17. Timely warning of danger within, Miranda Devine, The Daily Telegraph, 23 April 2013
  18. Left Stranded By An Ebbing Tide, Keith Windschuttle, Quadrant, June 2013, pp. 5-6.
  19. Why John won't vote Labor this time, Janet Albrechtsen, The Australian, 8 May 2013
  20. Chris Bowen, launch of The Lucky Culture, Revesby Workers Club, 8 May 2013
  21. Nick Cater shows he's a working-class fan in The Lucky Culture, Peter Craven, The Australian, 11 May 2013
  22. The Culture Wars: Legitimate Battlefield or Just Another Sneaky Right-Wing Attack, Mark Latham, Chifley Research Centre, 2 May 2013
  23. Guy Rundle, The trolling, parody genius of ‘Nick Cater’, Crikey, 8 Aug 2013
  24. I get by with a little help from my friends, Frank Bongiorno, Inside Story, 23 May 2013
  25. The Howard Factor, Nick Cater (ed.), Melbourne University Publishing, 2006.

External Link

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