Abstract

In 1955 29 Asian, African and Middle Eastern nations gathered in Bandung, Indonesia, to discuss a range of issues including colonialism, racialism, economic development, war and peace. India's Prime Minister, Jawaharlal Nehru, was one of the key figures at the conference, but the Chinese Prime Minister, Chou En-lai, was the primary focus of world attention and media interest. The conference raised awkward questions for the Australian government. It highlighted the point that Australia was geographically part of Asia and had a vital interest in the region, but the fact that Australia had not been invited to attend the conference emphasised its status as a nation apart, racially and culturally. The Bandung conference provides an ideal opportunity to examine thinking about Australia's place in Asia as key figures in the Department of External Affairs, journalists and Asianist intellectuals debated whether or not Australia should attend.

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