Since the earliest days of colonisation white Australians have
protectively swaddled themselves in the domestic interior. Faced with a
disconcerting and entirely alien environment, the replication of English
interiors provided the colony's settler communities with the tether they
sought to a guiding homeland and its comforting rules and practices.
Though Australian identity is aligned, truthfully or otherwise, to the
'masculine' exterior: the bush, the outback and the beach, women were
imperative to settler communities, and so too were the interiors they
created. Comfort and Judgement provides a richer, deeper understanding
of the Australian home than has been realised before.