Stefan Petrow Stefan Petrow i(6376762 works by)
Gender: Male
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1 y separately published work icon Remembering a Tasmanian Hero : The Life of Major Justin Hutchinson Stefan Petrow , Hobart : Artemis Publishing , 2015 8584269 2015 single work biography
1 Climbing the Barriers of Thought : The New Town Reading Circle 1892–1896 Stefan Petrow , 2013 single work criticism
— Appears in: Script and Print , vol. 37 no. 2 2013; (p. 88-111)

On 7 May 1892 a small group of middle-class men formed a reading circle in New Town, an old and prestigious suburb immediately to the north of Hobart. Ostensibly formed as part of the Australasian Home Reading Union (AHRU), the circle found that affiliation too constricting and broke away in November 1894 to run its meetings in a way more attuned to the temperament and interests of its members. A minute book of meetings to 24 March 1896 and some papers presented at the meetings, not all containing the author’s name or an identifying

date, have survived to give a sense of how this intellectual coterie approached the leading books and subjects of the day. What occurred at these lively, intelligent and thoughtful meetings forms the substance of this article, which broadens our

knowledge about reading circles in Australia and what the educated elite thought were books and subjects worthy of discussion and debate. As the dominating member of the circle, F. J. Young, noted, books offered “those ideas of morality

and the beautiful by which, often unknown to themselves, men are guided.” Of the many books and subjects discussed by the group, one notable absence is work by Australian writers and very little was said about women.' (Author's introduction)

2 y separately published work icon Varieties of Vice-Regal Life William Thomas Denison , Hobart : Tasmanian Historical Research Association , 2004 6729171 1870 single work autobiography

"Denison was Lieutenant-Governor of Tasmania between 1846 and 1855, and Governor of New South Wales and Governor-General from 1855 to 1861, when he became Governor of Madras. Only the first volume of Varieties of Vice-Regal Life refers to his life in Australia. It consists of transcripts of his letters to relatives and friends and to a lesser extent, officials, in England, and extracts from letters written in journal form by his wife Caroline, addressed to her family. Denison justifies the use of letters to form a record of his life by stating, in his preface, that they give 'a truthfulness that can never be attributed to mere reminiscences' and that they can provide different viewpoints of circumstances and events. The letters are largely allowed to speak for themselves, but are linked by some retrospective comment by way of explanation or summary" (Walsh and Hooton 52-3).

Source

Walsh, Kay and Joy Hooton. Australian Autobiographical Narratives : An Annotated Bibliography. Canberra : Australian Scholarly Editions Centre, University College, ADFA and National Library of Australia, 1993.

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