Get Free Shipping on orders over $79
Clever Men : How worlds collided on the scientific expedition to Arnhem Land of 1948 - Martin Thomas

Clever Men

How worlds collided on the scientific expedition to Arnhem Land of 1948

By: Martin Thomas

Paperback | 3 June 2025

At a Glance

Paperback


RRP $36.99

$29.75

20%OFF

or 4 interest-free payments of $7.44 with

In Stock and Ships next day
What really happened when Charles Mountford led a quarrelsome team of Australian and American scientists to explore traditional Aboriginal life in Arnhem Land in 1948.

'Here was I with the status of little more than a telephone mechanic, taking out the biggest scientific expedition in history'

In this way the legendary Charles Mountford immodestly described his biggest assignment: to lead an expedition of American and Australian scientists to Arnhem Land in northern Australia, investigating traditional Aboriginal life and the tropical environment. Backed by National Geographic, the Smithsonian Institution, and the Australian government, it was also a display of the friendship between Australia and the US.

But the adventure turned out to be anything but friendly. In this compelling account, award-winning historian Martin Thomas tells how they set out with fanfare in 1948 and how quickly the expedition turned toxic. Thomas uncovers the secrets, scandals, and unlikely achievements. He also reveals how Indigenous communities, including the elders known as 'clever men', dealt with the intrusion of these foreign 'experts'.

Drawing on years of collaborative research with Arnhem Land communities, Clever Men is a poignant portrayal of colliding worlds. In this encounter between scientific hubris and the world's oldest surviving cultures, Thomas finds a story of global significance and profound long-term impacts.

'An epic saga of discovery, intrigue, obsession and pillage' - Margo Ngawa Neale

'Absolutely mesmerising' - Grace Karskens

'Depicted as an epic Shakespearean-like tragedy, Clever Men weaves complex strands in a compelling story of western interaction with Indigenous Australia.' - Peter Yu

'This galloping narrative of Arnhem Land draws on years of intense research by one of Australia's sharpest historians.' - Peter Read

'A deep dive into the fraught interface between the shallow, intrusive gaze and rapacious acquisitiveness of the expedition and the profound secret-sacred understanding of its Indigenous subjects' - Cassandra Pybus

About the Author

Martin Thomas is a unique voice among the history writers of Australia. A Professor of History at ANU and an award-winning researcher, essayist, oral historian, and filmmaker, his work is driven by a deep interest in the meaning of landscapes, the legacies of colonisation, and the drama of cross-cultural encounter. He directed and co-produced a documentary film Etched in Bone. His book The Many Worlds of R. H. Mathews won the National Biography Award.

More in Indigenous Peoples

Musquito : The real story of a legendary colonial warrior - Naomi Parry Duncan
Surveying the Wild Abyss : Unravelling settler memory - Barry Corr
First Knowledges The Collection : 10-Book Box Set

RRP $199.00

$137.99

31%
OFF
The First Inventors : How people shaped a continent - Billy Griffiths
One Word - Melissa-Jane Fogarty

Hardcover

RRP $24.99

$21.75

13%
OFF
Decolonizing Research : Indigenous Storywork as Methodology - Jason De Santolo
Aboriginal Australians : 5th Edition : History Since 1788 - Richard Broome
Junior Atlas of Indigenous Australia - Macquarie Dictionary

RRP $39.99

$26.75

33%
OFF
The First Astronomers : How Indigenous Elders read the stars - Duane Hamacher
Dark Emu : Aboriginal Australia and the Birth of Agriculture - Bruce Pascoe
Growing Up Aboriginal in Australia - Anita Heiss

RRP $32.99

$26.99

18%
OFF
Macquarie Atlas of Indigenous Australia : 2nd Edition - Bill Arthur
True Tracks : Respecting Indigenous knowledge and culture - Terri Janke
First Knowledges Plants : Past, Present and Future - Zena Cumpston
First Knowledges Country : Future Fire, Future Farming - Bruce Pascoe
Always Was, Always Will Be : 2025 CBCA Eve Pownall Award Winner - Aunty Fay Muir
Right Story, Wrong Story : Adventures in Indigenous Thinking - Tyson Yunkaporta