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UQFL132 Dan O'neill Collection
FRYER LIBRARY Manuscript Finding Aid UQFL132 Dan O’Neill Collection Size 17 boxes Contents Newsletters and bulletins ; notes ; conference programs and papers ; pamphlets ; letters ; meetings minutes ; articles, posters, newspaper cuttings of Springbok tours ; other newspaper articles ; University of Queensland handbooks and programmes. Relating to socialist movement in University of Queensland, Vietnam war student protests, leftist political ideology, trade unionism. Biography Dan O'Neill was appointed a lecturer in the Department of English, University of Queensland, in 1965. Notes Open access Box 1 Folder 1 Students for Democratic Action Welcome Spanish internationalists, 1966 Australia and the crises in western democracy, by Peter Wertheim, 1969 Folder 2 Society for Democratic Action Student Guerrilla, Brisbane, v.1 no.1,2.5,6 v.2, no.5 (1969) Notification of conference: the first of a series of education programmes to be held in January and February, 1969 (1968) An analysis of the German uprising of Easter 1968 - three extracts (196?) On light, liberty and learning? (196?) Repression? 1969 Should we support the N.L.F.? (197?) Notification of S.D.A. educational programme [1969] ______________________________________________________________________________________________ Last updated: 8/11/2012 © University of Queensland 1 FRYER LIBRARY Manuscript Finding Aid Folder 3 Revolutionary Socialist Student Alliance Theory for structure of R.S.S.A. [196?] R.S.A. - R.S.S.A. split, by Jim Prentice, [Brisbane, 1970] Newssheet - R.S.A. v.1, no.11 1969, Bougainville. Brisbane (197?) Folder 4 Paper Dart Paper Dart: Newssheet of the Revolutionary Socialist Student Alliance v.1, no.2-10, 12; v.2, no.2,3 (1969) 3 unnumbered issues Folder 5 Margaret Bailey Case, 1969 Margaret Bailey Aid Committee. -
Let the Lunatics Run Their Own Asylum
Let the Lunatics Run their Own Asylum Participatory Democracy at the University of Sydney, 1960–1979 Lewis d’Avigdor A thesis submitted in partial fulfilment of the requirements of the degree of Bachelor of Arts (Honours) in History. University of Sydney June 2011 1 Acknowledgements I would like to thank first and foremost my supervisor, Julia Horne. Thank you for always making time to see me, reading my drafts with such speed and especially for your wisdom. I would also like to thank Hannah Forsyth and John Docker, who come from two distinct generations of academics that have studied student movements. Debating ideas with you has been both invaluable and a pleasure. Special thanks must go to my interview subjects, especially John Burnheim, Jean Curthoys and Liz Jacka. They helped me come to a more nuanced understanding of the events at Sydney University in the 1970s, of which they were key players. Finally, I would like to think my friends and family who put up with me this year. I would particularly like to thank my mother, Margriet, for her patience and Ellen, for her enduring support. 2 Contents Introduction 4 Chapter One 18 The Inexplicable Revolt: The Emergence of Student Movements in the 1960s Chapter Two 42 Behind the Slogans: Participatory Democracy in the University Chapter Three 63 Philosopher Kings and Student Citizens Chapter Four 85 An Island of Democracy in a Sea of Hierarchy Conclusion 95 A Failed Experiment? Bibliography 99 3 Introduction Participatory democracy lay at the heart of student movements that erupted around the world in the 1960s. -
Ken Mansell the Yeast Is
THE YEAST IS RED A HISTORY OF THE BAKERY (OFF-CAMPUS CENTRE OF THE MONASH UNIVERSITY LABOR CLUB 1968-1971) By KEN MANSELL (April 1994) 1 INTRODUCTION PRELUDE THE MONASH LABOR CLUB CHAPTER ONE THE YEAST The Yeast Red Base Headquarters CHAPTER TWO WHERE THE YEAST IS RED Walk Right in, it's around the Back Where the Yeast is Red The Revolutionary Socialists - Half-Baked CHAPTER THREE ALL FIRED UP Burn, Temple of Gold! Fighting Together - the worker-student alliance Space Wars All Coppers Are Bastards - Reflections on Violence CHAPTER FOUR TOWARDS THE CORRECT LINE The Young Communist League The Little Red Moles Free U Bring The War Home! The Prahran Peoples’ Movement CHAPTER FIVE IN THE BAKEHOUSE Solidarity Forever, the Party Makes Us Strong Daily at Dawn CHAPTER SIX CRUMBLING Oh Crumbs! Fragmentation of the Left Coalition Student Power The Worker-Student Alliance - Hard-baked FINALE CONCLUSION BIBLIOGRAPHY 2 INTRODUCTION An ASIO operative at Monash complained in 1970 that he was expected to find evidence of direct communication from Peking to The Bakery. He had indeed penetrated far into the Labor Club structure; far enough to know that this idea was wholly without substance. As ASIO explained to him, their task was to identify enemy agents so they might be quickly removed at the outbreak of hostilities.1 The Yeast is Red is a case study of the Australian new left of the late sixties. The new left initially emerged as part of a movement of growing opposition to the Vietnam War. The war shattered the previously dominant framework of ‘Cold War’ assumptions and profoundly altered the Australian political culture.2 Even though Vietnam and the associated conscription of male youths was the catalyst for the youth radicalisation of the sixties which produced the new left, the new radical consciousness was caused also by the effects of the social and cultural changes of the period.