%0 Journal Article %T A Critique of the Militarisation of Australian History and Culture Thesis: The Case of Anzac Battlefield Tourism %A Jim McKay %J PORTAL : Journal of Multidisciplinary International Studies %D 2013 %I %X This paper analyses the militarisation of Australian history and culture thesis with specific reference to the increasing popularity of Anzac battlefield tourism. I argue that the militarisation thesis contains ontological and epistemological flaws that render it incapable of understanding the multifaceted ways in which Australians experience Anzac battlefield tours. I then argue that in order to study how Australians both at home and overseas respond to the upcoming Anzac Centenary researchers will need to deploy an empirically-grounded and multidisciplinary framework. I demonstrate how proponents of militarisation: (1) ignore the polymorphous properties of Anzac myths; (2) are complicit with constructions of ¡®moral panics¡¯ about young Australian tourists; (3) overlook the reflexive capacities of teachers, students and tourists with respect to military history and battlefield tours; and (4) disregard the complex and contradictory aspects of visits to battlefields. My counter-narrative relies both on Stuart Hall¡¯s work on popular culture and empirical studies of battlefield tourism from myriad disciplines. %K Anzac %K battlefield tourism %K military history %K mythologies %K nationalism %K militarisation %U http://epress.lib.uts.edu.au/journals/index.php/portal/article/view/2371