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By permission of the Mitchell Library
y separately published work icon The Forum periodical  
Issue Details: First known date: 1922-1924... 1922-1924 The Forum
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AbstractHistoryArchive Description

The first issue of The Forum introduced its intention to produce 'a journal all-Australian in scope, in which thoughtful men and women can discuss the problems of Australia and can write and read about the things that interest thoughtful Australians, a journal on the lines of the English "Spectator" or "Nation", modified to suit Australian conditions'. Claiming no interest in appealing to 'class prejudice or class hatreds', it would provide a space for considered discussion of reasoned and honest opinions of every shade, including its own strongly held views, to which it sought to convert others. It believed that 'many, it may be most, of the evils from which Australia, like the rest of the world, is now suffering and of the dangers by which it is threatened are due to the neglect of old-fashioned virtues and old-fashioned truths -- the old-fashioned virtues of self-reliance, thrift, and industry'. In other words, it was serious, responsible, worthy, fair-minded, but anti-Labor. Most issues contained an Open Forum, in which leading commentators argued the case for and against such issues as motherhood endowment, proportional representation, compulsory arbitration, and censorship. It reviewed Freud's Introductory Lectures, and published a five-part series on Communism in Practice. While it covered the serious local and international questions of the day, it also ran regular columns on Turf, Sport, and Games (mainly cricket and golf) and on Art, Music, and Drama (it championed repertory against J. C. Williamson, q.v.).

Notes

Publication Details of Only Known VersionEarliest 2 Known Versions of

      Sydney, New South Wales,: 1922-1924 .

Works about this Work

y separately published work icon Jack Davis : A Life-Story Keith Chesson , Melbourne : J. M. Dent , 1988 Z109336 1988 single work biography

Chesson had first met Jack Davis in 1970 through his wife, when she was a member of the Executive Committee of the Aboriginal Advancement Council. It was in the late 1970s, that Jack Davis was approached by a publisher to write his own biography, Davis been too shy, had asked Chesson to write it. Chesson had transcribed the conversations with Jack on tape during social occasions, and wrote this fascinating history of Davis's life and his work in the literary and dramatic fields; in which the Chesson hope that this book helps to make Jack Davie's life and work better known and appreciated. (source: Chesson, 1983)

'The Forum' 1922 single work column
— Appears in: The Queenslander , 6 May 1922; (p. 3)
Announcement of the launch of a new newspaper with mention of its editors and its aims.
'The Forum' 1922 single work column
— Appears in: The Queenslander , 6 May 1922; (p. 3)
Announcement of the launch of a new newspaper with mention of its editors and its aims.
y separately published work icon Jack Davis : A Life-Story Keith Chesson , Melbourne : J. M. Dent , 1988 Z109336 1988 single work biography

Chesson had first met Jack Davis in 1970 through his wife, when she was a member of the Executive Committee of the Aboriginal Advancement Council. It was in the late 1970s, that Jack Davis was approached by a publisher to write his own biography, Davis been too shy, had asked Chesson to write it. Chesson had transcribed the conversations with Jack on tape during social occasions, and wrote this fascinating history of Davis's life and his work in the literary and dramatic fields; in which the Chesson hope that this book helps to make Jack Davie's life and work better known and appreciated. (source: Chesson, 1983)

PeriodicalNewspaper Details

Frequency:
Fortnightly
Range:
Vol.1, no.1 (24 May 1922) - Vol.2, no.26 (7 May 1924)
Size:
32-24pp.
Price:
Six pence
Graphics:
None
Advertising:
High-class domestic, including travel and cars, insurance and banking, machinery, cameras, pianos and typewiters, tailors, and food.
Last amended 11 Nov 2010 11:58:42
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