Australian Journal of Biography and History: No. 8, 2024
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Description
The Australian Journal of Biography and History No 8 (2024) applies biographical methodologies to enliven themes and episodes in Australian history. Studying John Wear Burton, the head of the Commonwealth department of external affairs between 1947 and 1950, Adam Hughes Henry explores some of the ways in which anti-communism in 1950s Australia served to limit critical thinking on the country’s foreign policy. Gary Osmond and Jan Richardson write on the Black sports promoter and entrepreneur Jack Dowridge, who lived and largely thrived in Brisbane between the mid-1870s until his death in 1922. Phillip Deery and Julie Kimber examine the often-overlooked figure of Evdokia Petrov, considering the ‘disjuncture between historical imagination and the archival record.’ In Richard Fotheringham’s article on the variety entertainer and singer Jenny Howard, aka Daisy Blowes, Howard emerges as a character in her own play. Martin Thomas relates in his article ‘Patrick White and the Path to Sarsaparilla’ how the novelist Patrick White demanded a ‘final pound of flesh from his biographer’ by making David Marr ‘sit with him at the dining table while he read it in front of him from beginning to end.’ The result was a biography of ‘complete artistic freedom’, ‘unauthorised’ certainly, but ‘aided and abetted by its subject.’ Patricia Clarke describes the experience of the journalist Iris Dexter, née Norton (1907–1974), in seeking, but until 1950 failing to obtain, a divorce from an abusive husband, and the devastating impact the episode had on her life. Two further articles in this number utilise collective biographical methodologies to illuminate historical episodes which have become emblematic in Australian history: Nichola Garvey relates the story of the ‘death ship’ Neptune, which arrived in New South Wales in 1790 as part of the infamous second fleet; and Peter Woodley examines the 1891 Queensland bush workers’ strike. This affair has generally been portrayed as a ‘war’ between capital and labour, but as Woodley argues, the strike also showed the ‘often intense and fraught intersections of individuals’ lives’, many of which would never have come to light were it not for the strike and its judicial consequences.
Details
- ISSN (print):
- 2209-9522
- ISSN (online):
- 2209-9573
- Publication date:
- Feb 2024
- Imprint:
- ANU Press
- DOI:
- http://doi.org/10.22459/AJBH.08.2024
- Journal:
- Australian Journal of Biography and History
- Disciplines:
- Arts & Humanities: Biography & Autobiography, History
- Countries:
- Australia
PDF Chapters
Australian Journal of Biography and History: No. 8, 2024 »
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- Preliminary pages (PDF, 63 KB)
- Introduction (PDF, 82 KB) – Malcolm Allbrook doi
Research Articles
- Beyond the limits: Australian anti‑communism and the unforgiving 1950s (PDF, 198 KB) – Adam Hughes Henry doi
- Sport, race and African-Caribbean migrants in Australia: Evaluating Jack Dowridge, the ‘Black Diamond’ boxer (PDF, 2.9 MB) – Gary Osmond and Jan Richardson doi
- Beyond the red shoe: Searching for Mrs Petrov (PDF, 689 KB) – Phillip Deery and Julie Kimber doi
- Autobiography as publicity: The case of Jenny Howard (PDF, 1 MB) – Richard Fotheringham doi
- Women’s lives in a fragmented archive: The story of The Wilful Murder (PDF, 216 KB) – Nichola Garvey doi
- Divorce divide: How divorce laws discriminated against women before ‘no cause’ (PDF, 139 KB) – Patricia Clarke doi
- Entangled experiences of class: The 1891 Queensland bush workers’ strike (PDF, 619 KB) – Peter Woodley doi
- Patrick White and the path to Sarsaparilla: How a great novelist became a great unread (PDF, 394 KB) – Martin Thomas doi
Author Memoir
- How does one choose narrative strategy? One biographer’s experience (PDF, 138 KB) – Gabriella Marie Kelly-Davies doi
Book Reviews
- Jennifer Bird review of Joel Stephen Birnie, My People’s Songs: How an Indigenous Family Survived Colonial Tasmania (PDF, 120 KB)
- A few good men? Moderate reflections from a martyr, an insider and a cigar smoker: Joshua Black review of Malcolm Turnbull, A Bigger Picture: With New Foreword; Christopher Pyne, The Insider: The Scoops, the Scandals and the Serious Business within the Canberra Bubble; Joe Hockey with Leo Shanahan, Diplomatic: A Washington Memoir (PDF, 159 KB)
- Derek Drinkwater review of James Cotton, The Australians at Geneva: Internationalist Diplomacy in the Interwar Years (PDF, 123 KB)
- Catherine Fisher review of Kylie Andrews, Trailblazing Women of Australian Public Broadcasting, 1945–1975 (PDF, 107 KB)
- Ann Hunter review of Ann Curthoys, Shino Konishi and Alexandra Ludewig, The Lives and Legacies of a Carceral Island: A Biographical History of Wadjemup/Rottnest Island (PDF, 119 KB)
- Nicole T. McLennan review of Richard Turner, Made in Lancashire: A Collective Biography of Assisted Migrants from Lancashire to Victoria, 1852–1853 (PDF, 108 KB)
- Daniel R. Meister review of Melanie Nolan, Biography: An Historiography (PDF, 118 KB)
- Colin Milner review of Mark Hearn, The Fin de Siècle Imagination in Australia, 1890–1914 (PDF, 109 KB)
- Pauline Reynolds review of Hilary Howes, Tristen Jones and Matthew Spriggs, eds, Uncovering Pacific Pasts: Histories of Archaeology in Oceania (PDF, 108 KB)
- Sam Ryan review of Jim Davidson, Emperors in Lilliput: Clem Christesen of Meanjin and Stephen Murray-Smith of Overland (PDF, 110 KB)
- Christina Spittel review of Nathan Hobby, The Red Witch: A Biography of Katharine Susannah Prichard (PDF, 111 KB)
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