y separately published work icon Dissent periodical  
Date: 1971-1974
Date: 1970-1971
Date: 1967-1970
Date: 1965-1967
Date: 1963-1965
Date: 1961-1962
Issue Details: First known date: 1961... 1961 Dissent
The material on this page is available to AustLit subscribers. If you are a subscriber or are from a subscribing organisation, please log in to gain full access. To explore options for subscribing to this unique teaching, research, and publishing resource for Australian culture and storytelling, please contact us or find out more.

AbstractHistoryArchive Description

In response to a 'renewed interest in political and social questions, particularly by young people', a group of Melbourne University students founded the quarterly magazine Dissent in 1961. The group described themselves as 'democratic socialists', and, suspicious of political parties, aimed to give voice to those not strictly aligned with the Labor or Communist movements. Dissent has been seen as a secular version of the Catholic magazine Prospect (also produced at Melbourne University). Indeed, several former editors of Prospect were founding editors of Dissent.

Providing a forum for the discussion of social, cultural, economic and political issues, Dissent attracted a diverse group of contributors who have gone on to careers in government. These include John Button, Ralph Willis, Race Matthews, Gregory Clark, Alan Lloyd, Gareth Evans, David Scott, John Patterson and Kim Beazley. Also publishing book reviews, short stories, poetry and essays on the arts, Dissent attracted contributions from writers such as Chris Wallace-Crabbe, Bernard Smith, Harry Heseltine, Michael Wilding, Laurie Clancy and Barry Oakley. Special issues concentrated on subjects like education, women's issues and abortion, and Dissent overtly opposed the Australian and American involvement in Vietnam.

Dissent aimed to provide an alternative view to writers associated with other magazines (particularly Outlook and Twentieth Century) by representing the view of a younger generation to which the editors believed the Labor Party should appeal. In Writing in Hope and Fear, John McLaren argues that 'by taking the new culture as a matter for serious analysis, and incorporating it in political discourse, Dissent gave it a respectability that helped to make it a part of the cultural formation of a generation rather than a passing fashion of youth.'

Dissent was guided by a series of editors until 1974 when editorial duties were undertaken by an Editorial Board. Dissent continued with this arrangement for another four years, ceasing production at the end of 1978.

Publication Details of Only Known VersionEarliest 2 Known Versions of

First known date: 1961
      Melbourne, Victoria,: 1961-1978 .

Works about this Work

y separately published work icon Dissent : The Student Press in 1960s Australia Sally Percival Wood , Melbourne : Scribe , 2017 11644012 2017 multi chapter work criticism

'A passionate portrayal of Australia's social awakening - the people, the politics, and the power of the student press.

'The 1960s was a decade of profound change, marked by an accumulating tension between political conservatism and social restlessness. During this time, university campuses became sites of dissent, amplified by the proliferation of tertiary institutions, producing the best-educated generation in Australian history.

'Student newspapers began probing the Vietnam War and resisting conscription, challenging racism and the absence of Aborigines at university, stirring gender politics, and testing the limits of obscenity. With erudition, wit, and daring creativity - and enabled by new printing technology - student newspapers played an immensely important role in Australia's social, cultural, and political transformation, the results of which still resonate throughout Australia today.

'In Dissent, historian Sally Percival Wood encapsulates the spirit of the era, delving into the people, the places, and the politics of the time to reveal how this transformation took place. From 1961, when Monash University opened, to 1972, when the Whitlam government came to power, Dissent shows just how profoundly the political conservatism emblematic of post-war Australia struggled to adapt to this new generation, with its new, sometimes alarming, audacity - and goes on to ask- has the student press lost its nerve?' (Publication summary)

Magazines of the Left: Two Stayers and Two Hopefuls Bill Tully , 2004 single work review
— Appears in: Voice : A Journal of Comment and Review , June no. 10 2004; (p. 32-38)

— Review of Overland 1954 periodical (270 issues); Arena 1963 periodical (51 issues); Dissent 1961 periodical (18 issues)
Bill Tully takes a broad look at four periodicals: Overland, Arena, Dissent and the Socialist Alliance's Seeing Red. Although some attention is paid to specific 2004 issues of the periodicals, the review deals mostly in general terms and provides background information on the establishment of each journal.
New Little Magazines : Religious Prospect and Secular Dissent John McLaren , 1996 single work criticism
— Appears in: Writing in Hope and Fear : Literature as Politics in Postwar Australia 1996; (p. 141-157)
Magazines of the Left: Two Stayers and Two Hopefuls Bill Tully , 2004 single work review
— Appears in: Voice : A Journal of Comment and Review , June no. 10 2004; (p. 32-38)

— Review of Overland 1954 periodical (270 issues); Arena 1963 periodical (51 issues); Dissent 1961 periodical (18 issues)
Bill Tully takes a broad look at four periodicals: Overland, Arena, Dissent and the Socialist Alliance's Seeing Red. Although some attention is paid to specific 2004 issues of the periodicals, the review deals mostly in general terms and provides background information on the establishment of each journal.
New Little Magazines : Religious Prospect and Secular Dissent John McLaren , 1996 single work criticism
— Appears in: Writing in Hope and Fear : Literature as Politics in Postwar Australia 1996; (p. 141-157)
y separately published work icon Dissent : The Student Press in 1960s Australia Sally Percival Wood , Melbourne : Scribe , 2017 11644012 2017 multi chapter work criticism

'A passionate portrayal of Australia's social awakening - the people, the politics, and the power of the student press.

'The 1960s was a decade of profound change, marked by an accumulating tension between political conservatism and social restlessness. During this time, university campuses became sites of dissent, amplified by the proliferation of tertiary institutions, producing the best-educated generation in Australian history.

'Student newspapers began probing the Vietnam War and resisting conscription, challenging racism and the absence of Aborigines at university, stirring gender politics, and testing the limits of obscenity. With erudition, wit, and daring creativity - and enabled by new printing technology - student newspapers played an immensely important role in Australia's social, cultural, and political transformation, the results of which still resonate throughout Australia today.

'In Dissent, historian Sally Percival Wood encapsulates the spirit of the era, delving into the people, the places, and the politics of the time to reveal how this transformation took place. From 1961, when Monash University opened, to 1972, when the Whitlam government came to power, Dissent shows just how profoundly the political conservatism emblematic of post-war Australia struggled to adapt to this new generation, with its new, sometimes alarming, audacity - and goes on to ask- has the student press lost its nerve?' (Publication summary)

PeriodicalNewspaper Details

Frequency:
quarterly
Range:
1961-1978
Size:
27cm, app 50 pages
Price:
two shillings and sixpence (1961-1963); three shillings (1964-1966); forty cents (1966-1970); fifty cents (1970-1972); seventy-five cents (1972-1974); $1 (1974-1976)
Last amended 25 Nov 2019 09:22:33
Newspapers:
    Powered by Trove
    X