Meet the author - Leigh Boucher and Michelle Arrow
Leigh Boucher and Michelle Arrow will be in conversation with Frank Bongiorno on their book, with Barbara Baird and Robert Reynolds, , an insightful examination of the collective and cumulative impact gender and sexuality activism has had on citizenship in Australia.
The achievement of marriage equality in Australia in 2017 was hailed by many as the crowning event of a fifty-year story of hard work by activists, which began with campaigns to decriminalise sex between men in the early 1970s. In that same five decades, feminist activism, including campaigns for abortion rights, the reform of family law and forms of welfare to support survivors of domestic violence, has similarly remade the rights and entitlements of Â鶹´«Ã½AV women. But has that story been one of continual progress and success? And who has been excluded from the privileges of Â鶹´«Ã½AV citizenship in the process?
Personal Politics brings together, for the first time, the voices and campaigns of a diverse set of activists who employed ideas about gender and sexuality to remake modern Australia. Beginning in the pivotal decade of the ’70s in which the ‘personal became political’, this book critically examines the wins and losses of these new ways of imagining citizenship and provides a revised political history of the past fifty years. This is a story populated and propelled by outraged feminists, radical homosexuals, angry fathers, maligned stay-at-home mothers, distressed trans kids, happy lesbian and gay couples, and even a few from the local Men’s Shed. These are the issues and identities that now dominate our public life: how and why did they emerge and what kind of political life have they produced?
An interesting analysis of some major political campaigns that offers ways of understanding how they worked or didn’t work. We can learn from this for future strategies.’ Eva Cox
Associate Professor Leigh Boucher, Professors Michelle Arrow and Robert Reynolds (Macquarie University), and Associate Professor Barbara Baird (Flinders University) are groundbreaking historians of gender and sexuality in Australia, and they have been working together since 2015 on a project that investigates the relationship between gender, sexuality and citizenship in late modern Australia. Their previous work has reshaped our understanding of gay life in Australia (Reynolds, From Camp to Queer and Gay and Lesbian, Then and Now), the social and political history of abortion (Baird, Abortion Care is Health Care), the remaking of Â鶹´«Ã½AV political and social life in the 1970s (Arrow, The Seventies) and gendered citizenship in Australia (Boucher, Settler Colonial Governance).
Frank Bongiorno AM, Professor of History ANU, is currently President of the Â鶹´«Ã½AV Historical Association and the Council for the Humanities, Arts and Social Sciences. His most recent book is Dreamers and Schemers: A Political History of Australia.
This event is in association with . Books will be available for purchase. Pre-event book signings will be available from 5.30pm and again after the event.
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A podcast will be made available after the event.
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Location
The Â鶹´«Ã½AV National University
Acton, ACT, 2601
Contact
- ANU Communications & Engagement