A Global History of Australian Women's Liberation, 1968-1985

This dissertation offers a global history of the Australian women’s liberation movement. It begins in the 1950s and concludes in the mid-1980s, with most attention being given to the period 1968-1985. Throughout this period the Australian women’s liberation movement changed the fabric of Australian...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Campbell, Rosa
Format: Doctoral or Postdoctoral Thesis
Language:English
Published: University of Cambridge 2022
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.repository.cam.ac.uk/handle/1810/363679
https://doi.org/10.17863/CAM.105647
Description
Summary:This dissertation offers a global history of the Australian women’s liberation movement. It begins in the 1950s and concludes in the mid-1980s, with most attention being given to the period 1968-1985. Throughout this period the Australian women’s liberation movement changed the fabric of Australian society, successfully agitating for gender justice and transforming both the nation and the lives of individuals. The research focusses on two key cities of Australian feminist organising; Sydney and Melbourne but it also considers the women’s peace camp at Pine Gap, near Mpartnwe/Alice Springs and a global feminist conference which took place in Australia’s capital, Canberra. Its findings are drawn through close attention to periodicals from across Australia, the US, Britain and the Pacific. It combines twenty-two oral history interviews with archival research to reveal the dynamic and extensive ways that the Australian women’s liberation movement was globally influenced. Historians have recognised that feminist movements have been globally informed, but the global turn in the history of feminism has largely focussed on the late 19th and 20th century up until the 1950s, neglecting the women’s liberation movements of the 1970s. A global approach is conducive to understanding the Australian women’s liberation movement. This global frame reveals the work of those who have been marginalised in histories of feminism, such as communist women, migrants, women of colour including those from the Global South, and First Nations women. Through employing a global perspective, this dissertation foregrounds their direct involvement in women’s movements, and their transformative contributions at the level of political thought. It dislodges white women as the central change makers in feminism and the Global North as the central site of feminist thought and action. This dissertation examines the significant impact of communist women on Australian women’s liberation. It reveals the importance of global communist networks on the ...