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The digital revolution was one of the best things to happen to Shaun Carney because it ended his career. When he took a redundancy from his job as associate editor and political writer with The Age, he had to stop to consider whether a 55-year old man still had any value. This is a tour through suburban Australian life, journalism, politics and the burdens of family expectations.

Produktbeschreibung
The digital revolution was one of the best things to happen to Shaun Carney because it ended his career. When he took a redundancy from his job as associate editor and political writer with The Age, he had to stop to consider whether a 55-year old man still had any value. This is a tour through suburban Australian life, journalism, politics and the burdens of family expectations.
Autorenporträt
Shaun Carney was a journalist, editor andcolumnist with The Herald and The Age in a career spanning 35 years. After leaving full-time journalism he became a weekly columnist for the Herald Sun and is an adjunct associate professor with the School of Social Sciences at Monash University, Australia. His previous books are Peter Costello: The New Liberal and Australia in Accord: Politics and Industrial Relations Under the HawkeGovernment.