Affronted by the xenophobic nationalists who stalked the land during the
Howard years, many progressive Australians have rejected a love of
country, forgetting that there is a patriotism of the liberal left that
at different times has advanced liberty, egalitarianism, and democratic
citizenship. Tim Soutphommasane, a first-generation Australian and
political philosopher who has journeyed from Sydney's western suburbs to
Oxford University, re-imagines patriotism as a generous sentiment of
democratic renewal and national belonging. In accessible prose, he
explains why our political leaders will need to draw upon the better
angels of patriotism if they hope to inspire citizens for
nation-building, and indeed persuade them to make sacrifices in the hard
times ahead. As we debate the twenty-first century challenges of
reconciliation and a republic, citizenship and climate change,
Reclaiming Patriotism proposes a narrative we have to have.