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People's History of Australia
People's History of Australia
23 episodes
2 months ago
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History
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All content for People's History of Australia is the property of People's History of Australia and is served directly from their servers with no modification, redirects, or rehosting. The podcast is not affiliated with or endorsed by Podjoint in any way.
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History
Episodes (20/23)
People's History of Australia
Ep 23 – Resistance on the line: the radical history of telephone operators
In this episode we look at the radical history of Australian telephone operators, a predominantly female workforce with gruelling working conditions and a terrible union, and how this was turned around and operators became some of the most militant workers in the country.
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4 months ago
2 hours 12 minutes 24 seconds

People's History of Australia
Ep 22 – The 1970s women’s liberation movement
In the late 1960s and 1970s, a powerful and radical new movement arose in Australia challenging the widespread oppression that women faced across the country – the women’s liberation movement. Women in Australia in this era had plenty to fight about. It was illegal to get an abortion, and divorce was extremely difficult to obtain....
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8 months ago
1 hour 12 minutes 23 seconds

People's History of Australia
Ep 21 – Radical Chinese workers in Australian history
Throughout Australian history, Chinese workers in Australia have been demonised for their alleged enthusiasm for undercutting white workers and happily embracing terrible working conditions from the 19th century until the present day.
Fortunately, these racist myths are precisely that - myths. From the arrival of the first Chinese migrants in the 1840s, Chinese workers in Australia have an extraordinary history of rebelling, resisting, going on strike, and collectively fighting against their employers for better wages and better working conditions.
To talk about this amazing history that has been virtually hidden and ignored, we're joined in this episode by Liam Ward, a filmmaker and academic at RMIT University in Melbourne, who has researched and publicised some of the stories of Chinese workers in Australia and their struggles.
Find full show notes and links for this episode, including more details about our upcoming day-long People's History festival, at our website -
www.peopleshistory.com.au
Support us on our new Patreon account here -
www.patreon.com/peopleshistoryofaustralia
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11 months ago
1 hour 7 minutes 48 seconds

People's History of Australia
Ep 20 – The struggle against anti-Aboriginal racism in 1920s and 1930s Australia
Throughout Australia's history, racism has proven to be a remarkably effective weapon in dividing different groups from each other, despite them sharing the same common enemies and the same interests. Vicious anti-Aboriginal racism was deeply rooted in Australian culture from an early stage, and during the 18th, 19th and early 20th centuries, there is minimal history of joint struggle between white workers and Aboriginal people.
In the 1930s, however, dramatic changes began to take shape. For the first time ever, mass meetings of predominantly white union members began passing motions declaring their solidarity with Aboriginal resistance. White unemployed workers fought alongside unemployed Aboriginal workers. And a huge campaign took shape across the country, with the participation of thousands of white workers, against frontier massacres and violence. At the same time, radical left-wing theory began arguing that Aboriginal people and every other working-class person in Australia had a shared interest in opposing racism and waging united struggles together.
To talk about this incredible history and how such a remarkable change took place, we're joined in this episode by Paddy Gibson, an activist, academic and historian, who discusses socialist anti-racist theory in the 19th century, its flaws and how it was modified and challenged by the Communist Part of Australia during 20th century, and the amazing campaigns led by the Communist Party against anti-Aboriginal racism during the 1920s and 1930s.
Find full show notes and links for this episode at our website -
www.peopleshistory.com.au
Support us on Patreon here -
www.patreon.com/peopleshistoryofaustralia
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1 year ago
1 hour 13 minutes 48 seconds

People's History of Australia
Ep 19 – Jobs for women! Fighting sexism at the Port Kembla steelworks
Since it was founded in the 1920s, BHP's Port Kembla steelworks has completely dominated the town of Wollongong, employing over 25,000 workers at its peak and physically towering over the city.
For much of its existence, the steelworks also systematically discriminated against women, deliberately confining women to only the lowest-paying jobs, refusing to employ women as steelworkers, and making up arbitrary rules to keep women out - all while constantly advertising for new jobs.
In the 1970s, women in Wollongong decided to fight back. They protested, chained themselves to the gates of the steelworks, and sneaked in and stayed for overnight shifts with the support of male steelworkers. Then, in 1980, activists stepped up the pressure and began a largescale Jobs for Women campaign that involved thousands of workers, led to a protest encampment being set up outside the steelworks, and witnessed mass rallies for women's rights in the centre of Wollongong.
To talk about this amazing struggle, we're joined by in this episode socialist activist Diana Covell, a founding member of the Jobs for Women campaign and a former steelworker at Port Kembla.
Find full show notes and links for this episode at our website -
www.peopleshistory.com.au
Support us on Patreon here -
www.patreon.com/peopleshistoryofaustralia
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1 year ago
1 hour 8 seconds

People's History of Australia
Ep 18 – SCA here to stay! The campaign to save Sydney College of the Arts
In mid-2016, the University of Sydney abruptly announced that it would be closing down its Sydney College of the Arts campus. Within the space of a few months, the internationally-renowned arts school, which had produced scores of famous graduates and offered an almost unique education in visual and fine arts, would be gone, and its students shunted off to another university.
Fortunately, students at SCA had other ideas, and waged an epic mass campaign to keep the college open that saw huge meetings, strikes and a student takeover of SCA's administration building.
In this episode we interview Kelton Muir, an activist at SCA who's written an honours thesis about the campaign.
Find full show notes and links for this episode at our website -
www.peopleshistory.com.au
Support us on Patreon here -
www.patreon.com/peopleshistoryofaustralia
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1 year ago
56 minutes 27 seconds

People's History of Australia
Ep 17 – Years of rage: social conflict in the Malcolm Fraser era
In November 1975, the elected Labor Party government of Australia was sacked without notice by Sir John Kerr, the governor-general. Having single-handedly gotten rid of the elected government, Sir John then personally appointed a new government of his own choosing led by Malcolm Fraser and the Liberal Party.
The dismissal – or the Kerr Coup as many referred to it – was one of the most dramatic events in Australian history, and ushered in a period of intense social conflict. For the next eight years, Malcolm Fraser’s prime ministership was marked by general strikes, high levels of industrial disputes and working-class militancy, riots in the streets, powerful environmental campaigns, and vibrant social movements against the oppression of women, LGBTQ people, Aboriginal people and migrants.
To tell the story of this incredible era, we're joined by Diane Fieldes, a socialist activist and historian.
Find full show notes and links for this episode at our website -
www.peopleshistory.com.au
Support us on Patreon here -
www.patreon.com/peopleshistoryofaustralia
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1 year ago
1 hour 20 minutes 34 seconds

People's History of Australia
Ep 16 – Resistance and rebellion in convict Australia
When the British Empire invaded and colonised Australia in 1788, the new ruling class had a problem - there was no pre-existing working class in Australia waiting around to work for them. Their solution was to bring tens of thousands of convict prisoners here against their will as a labour force.
Despite often horrendous working conditions and a brutal regime of punishment, convicts fought back, frequently going on strike, rioting, rebelling, escaping to become bushrangers, and engaging in hundreds of thousands of acts of collective and individual resistance. In this episode, we interview Michael Quinlan, UNSW academic and author of new book 'Unfree Workers', about this inspiring history.
Find full show notes and links for this episode at our website -
www.peopleshistory.com.au
Support us on Patreon here -
www.patreon.com/peopleshistoryofaustralia
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2 years ago
56 minutes 13 seconds

People's History of Australia
Ep 15 – Fighting for the right to protest in 1970s Queensland
Find full show notes and links for this episode at our website -
www.peopleshistory.com.au
Support us on Patreon here -
www.patreon.com/peopleshistoryofaustralia
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2 years ago
34 minutes 30 seconds

People's History of Australia
Ep 14 – How anti-racists defeated Pauline Hanson in the 90s
In 1996, newly elected politician Pauline Hanson swept to national prominence after making an extraordinarily racist and inflammatory maiden speech in federal parliament. Capitalising on her notoriety, Hanson announced plans to form a new political party, One Nation, with local branches and a mass membership, and polls indicated she would win widespread support.
Anti-racists, however, had other ideas. Huge anti-Hanson rallies were organised in towns and cities across the country, and every attempt to run a public meeting featuring Hanson or build a local party branch was met with large and militant protests that disrupted and often shut her meetings down. Support for One Nation dwindled and by late 1998 the party had collapsed.
In this episode we chat with Vashti Fox about the extraordinary movement to defeat Pauline Hanson and prevent the formation of a mass, racist party in Australia.
Find full show notes and links for this episode at our website -
www.peopleshistory.com.au
Support us on Patreon here -
www.patreon.com/peopleshistoryofaustralia
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2 years ago
1 hour 10 minutes 14 seconds

People's History of Australia
Ep 13 – The Workers’ University: adult education in the Communist Party of Australia
In the 1940s, with an influx of thousands of new members, the Communist Party of Australia established the Marx Schools - one of the most remarkable experiments in Australian educational history.
The schools ran from 10am until 10pm every day of the week, and offered extensive courses in socialist theory, the practicalities of union organising, how to chair meetings and give public speeches, in anti-fascism and women’s rights, and in art, economics, philosophy and literature. With a pedagogy that was far more advanced that most universities, they taught deeply complex ideas to thousands of workers, most of whom hadn't completed school beyond age 13 or 14.
To discuss this amazing undertaking, we speak to Bob Boughton, who's researched extensively on the Marx Schools.
Find full show notes and links for this episode at our website -
www.peopleshistory.com.au
Support us on Patreon here -
www.patreon.com/peopleshistoryofaustralia
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2 years ago
50 minutes 8 seconds

People's History of Australia
Ep 12 – Black Power in rural NSW: the 1973 Aboriginal cotton chippers’ strike
In early 1973, over a thousand predominantly Aboriginal workers rose up on strike against their employers in the cotton fields of rural NSW, where they were paid pitiful wages, pushed to work for over ten hours a day, denied rest breaks, and even doused with toxic pesticides as planes sprayed it over fields while workers were still in them.
The strike took place at the height of the cotton season and threatened to ruin the entire year’s crop, and within days the petrified cotton-growers had capitulated and granted instant pay rises of almost 50%. In this episode, we're joined by Jordan Humphreys to learn more about this inspiring story.
Find full show notes and links for this episode at our website -
www.peopleshistory.com.au
Support us on Patreon here -
www.patreon.com/peopleshistoryofaustralia
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2 years ago
33 minutes 2 seconds

People's History of Australia
Ep 11 – The Turkish socialist movement in Melbourne
In the 1970s and 1980s, Turkish migrants in Melbourne established a thriving working class culture - founding social centres, organising strikes, waging political campaigns, and running theatre groups, language classes, sporting teams and other cultural activities. Today we chat with human rights lawyer and researcher Eda Seyhan, who's conducted extensive research into this extraordinary movement.
Find full show notes and links for this episode at our website -
www.peopleshistory.com.au
Support us on Patreon here -
www.patreon.com/peopleshistoryofaustralia
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3 years ago
56 minutes 32 seconds

People's History of Australia
Ep 10 – The epic story of mining unionism in the Pilbara
The Pilbara is one of the remotest and most economically significant regions not just in Australia, but in the world, with almost indescribably huge quantities of iron ore. In this episode, we chat with Alexis Vassiley about the epic story of Pilbara unionism, from the rise of mining unionism in the 1960s, to the peak of union power in the 1970s when the Pilbara was one of the most militant union strongholds in Australia, through to the total annihilation and destruction of Pilbara unionism in the late 1980s and 1990s.
Find full show notes and links for this episode at our website -
www.peopleshistory.com.au
Support us on Patreon here -
www.patreon.com/peopleshistoryofaustralia
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3 years ago
1 hour 32 minutes 31 seconds

People's History of Australia
Ep 9 – The Industrial Workers of the World in Australia
In the early 1900s, radicals and militant unionists across Australia founded the Industrial Workers of the World, arguably the most legendary left-wing organisation in Australian history. The IWW believed workers should form unions not just to win better wages and conditions, but to overthrow bosses and take over their workplaces themselves, and within a few years they'd recruited thousands of members and influences hundreds of thousands of workers.
In this episode, we talk to historian Verity Burgmann about the IWW and their influence in Australia.
Find full show notes and links for this episode at our website -
www.peopleshistory.com.au
Support us on Patreon here -
www.patreon.com/peopleshistoryofaustralia
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3 years ago
47 minutes 12 seconds

People's History of Australia
Ep 8 – The 1973 Ford Broadmeadows riot
In June 1973, the Ford Motor Company's factory in Broadmeadows, Melbourne, exploded with protest. Thousands of migrant workers, who were subject to brutal working conditions and racist company management, staged a 12-week strike, and when their own union officials attempted to force them back to work, they rioted and smashed up the factory - in the process winning huge wage increases and basic respect.
In this episode, we speak with Frank Argondizzo, who took part in the strike and was a union activist at Ford for 25 years.
Find full show notes and links for this episode at our website -
www.peopleshistory.com.au
Support us on Patreon here -
www.patreon.com/peopleshistoryofaustralia
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4 years ago
51 minutes 1 second

People's History of Australia
Ep 7 – The 1978 Sydney Mardi Gras
On 24 June 1978, thousands of people poured onto the streets for Sydney's first ever Mardi Gras - a joyful celebration of gender and sexual diversity, and a defiant statement against state-sanctioned homophobia which viciously criminalised and discriminated against LGBTQI people. In today's episode we chat with Peter Murphy, who was there on the night as police brutally attacked the parade, and as a parade-goers courageously fought back, changing the course of Australian history.
Find full show notes and links for this episode at our website -
www.peopleshistory.com.au
Support us on Patreon here -
www.patreon.com/peopleshistoryofaustralia
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4 years ago
59 minutes 46 seconds

People's History of Australia
Ep 6 – The 1969 Clarrie O’Shea general strike
In May 1969, Clarrie O’Shea, the secretary of the Victorian branch of the tram workers’ union, was jailed for refusing to pay fines his union had been hit with.
Within days, over 1,000,000 workers across Australia had gone on strike, O'Shea was released from prison, and the repressive 'Penal Powers' laws he was jailed under, which made strikes illegal, had been rendered dead. Strike rates exploded across Australia, wages skyrocketed, and workers made gains which we still enjoy today.
In this episode we chat with Katie Wood, a union delegate and archivist at the University of Melbourne, about the 1969 general strike and what it means for us today.
Find full show notes and links for this episode at our website -
www.peopleshistory.com.au
Support us on Patreon here -
www.patreon.com/peopleshistoryofaustralia
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4 years ago
44 minutes 41 seconds

People's History of Australia
Ep 5 – The hidden history of Australia in World War I
Few periods of Australian history are as heavily mythologised as World War I. From school textbooks to Anzac Day ceremonies, we're told that Australia was born as a nation on the shores of Gallipoli and that the country united as one behind our gallant diggers, who gave their lives to defend our freedom, our democracy, and our way of life.
In this episode we chat with historian Robert Bollard and explode these myths. Far from the stereotypical image of patriotic unity, WWI saw Australia ripped apart as tens of thousands of Australian died in the trenches of Europe, inflation and unemployment devastated working class living standards, opposition and anti-war organising was ruthlessly criminalised and suppressed, and workers fought back by conducting what was probably the largest strike wave in Australian history.
Find full show notes and links for this episode at our website -
www.peopleshistory.com.au
Support us on Patreon here -
www.patreon.com/peopleshistoryofaustralia
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5 years ago
49 minutes 28 seconds

People's History of Australia
Ep 4 – The life and times of Nick Origlass, the Red Mayor of Leichhardt
In 1971, a Trotskyist revolutionary was elected as the mayor of Leichhardt Municipal Council in Sydney - one of the most unusual developments in Australian political history. This Trotskyist revolutionary was Nick Origlass, who over the course of his life fought the fascist New Guard in the streets of Kings Cross, led thousands of Balmain ironworkers on strike against their own union's policy of sacrificing wages and conditions during World War Two, and then attempted to turn Leichhardt Council into a directly democratic campaigning body that pioneered environmental activism in the 1960s and 1970s.
In today's episode, we cover Nick's remarkable life and activism.
Find full show notes and links for this episode at our website -
www.peopleshistory.com.au
Support us on Patreon here -
www.patreon.com/peopleshistoryofaustralia
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5 years ago
31 minutes 6 seconds

People's History of Australia