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Dowse, Sara (1938 - )

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National Library of Australia Manuscript Collection
 
[Repository details]
Title:Papers of Dale Sara Dowse (1938-)
Reference:MS 7365
Date Range:1958 - 1998
Description:

The bulk of the collection comprises papers relating to Dowse's work as a writer, including research material, correspondence, newspaper cuttings and drafts of her novels, reviews and short stories. There are papers relating to her work as head of the Office of Women's Affairs, papers relating to grant applications, and personal correspondence with family and friends. There are extensive files on West Block, Canberra tales, Schemetime and Silver city, and also on the National Women's Advisory Council, Australian Labor Party, and Australian National Word Festival.

Quantity:147 boxes (20.5 m)
Access:Open access - except for papers emanating from her work in the Office of Women's Affairs (closed for 30 years). Boxes 59-91 are closed.
Finding Aid(s):

Finding aid (15 p.) available in the Manuscript Reading Room. Cited In: Guide to collections of manuscripts relating to Australia ; E735

See Also:National Women's Advisory Council (1978 - ) | Office of Women's Affairs (1974 - 1977) | Women's Electoral Lobby (1972 - )
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National Library of Australia Oral History Collection
 
[Repository details]
Item Title:Interview with Julia Ryan, feminist [sound recording] / interviewer, Sara Dowse
Reference:ORAL TRC 2651
Date Range:c. 1970 - 1990
Creator:Ryan, Julia (1937 - )
Description:

Ryan speaks of the National Foundation for Australian Women, its history and aim to promote feminist ideas into the far future, how the composition of members has changed over the years, the changes to home-based women, the advent of "second-wave" feminism, the history of the women's movement in Canberra starting formally in June 1978, previously operated informally from 1969 as an off-shoot from the Sydney group lead by Lyndal Ryan, how the movement grew through networking, why their meetings were closed to men, how 1972 saw an increase in political involvement with their support of the Aboriginal Embassy tent and the establishment of the Women's Electoral Lobby, their resistance to takeovers by both moderate and extreme political groups, the opportunity feminists had during the Whitlam years to gain influence in the bureaucracy with the appointment of Elizabeth Reid in 1973 as Whitlam's adviser on women's issues, how the group engaged in consciousness-raising, the emergence of femocrats like Mary Menange and Anne Somers threatened to depower women by transferring too much responsibility to government bodies, the highlights of 1975 as International Women's Year and its contribution to the Labour Government dismissal, how feminism eventually influenced the right-wing of politics, the relationship between gender and class in social oppression, the move from Marxist politics to post-modern Foucault models for change and the emergence of women's studies as a discipline.

Formats:Audio
Quantity:1 tape (0.02 m)
Access:Open
Finding Aid(s):

Transcript available (typescript, 155 leaves)

Related Entries:Ryan, Julia (1937 - )
See Also:Canberra Women's Liberation Group (1970s - ) | National Foundation for Australian Women (1989 - )
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Published by National Foundation for Australian Women on Australian Women's Archives Project Web Site
Comments, questions, corrections and additions: awap@womenaustralia.info
Prepared by: Acknowledgements
Updated: 16 October 2008
http://womenaustralia.info/archives/AWE0024a.htm

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