The Brisbane Years of Laurence Collinson

Authors

  • William Hatherell

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.1017/S1321816600004396

Keywords:

Max Harris, 'Angry Penguins', Laurence Collinson, charges of 'indecent advertisements', national cultural stage

Abstract

The autumn 1944 ‘Ern Malley’ edition of Max Harris's Angry Penguins was a defining moment in Australian cultural history for more than one reason. To add to the exposure of the Malley hoax in June 1944, Harris found himself in August having to defend charges of ‘indecent advertisements’ (Heyward, 184). Harris's partner in publishing Angry Penguins, John Reed, wrote in a letter of 5 September 1944 — the day the trial began in the Adelaide Magistrates Court — that the ‘indictment includes 7 of the Malley poems, all of Max's, the Cowan and Stivens stories and Collinson's poem’ (Reed, 367). The 19-year-old Brisbanite Laurence Collinson had conjured up a typically dramatic moment to announce his entry onto the national cultural stage — stumbling into a bit part in a drama that was both a crucial battle in the war between Australian literary modernists and traditionalists, and a worthy local precursor to Britain's Lady Chatterley trial of 1959.

Author Biography

  • William Hatherell

    William Hatherell is the author of The Third Metropolis: Imagining Brisbane Through Art and Literature, which will be published by the University ofQueensland Press in 2007.

References

Anderson, Michele, Barjai, Miya Studio and Young Brisbane Artists of the 1940s: Towards a Radical Practice, BA (Hons) thesis, St Lucia: University of Queensland, 1981.

Auden, W.H., Selected Poems. London: Faber and Faber, 1968.

Barjai (originally known as Senior Tabloid) 1943–1947.

Blackman, Barbara, Glass After Glass: Autobiographical Reflections. Ringwood: Viking, 1997.

Collinson, Laurence, ‘Friday Night at the Schrammers’. Australian One-Act Plays, Book 2. Ed. Branson, G.. Adelaide: Rigby, 1962.

Collinson, Laurence, ‘In Love with Michelangelo’. Westerly 1 (1972): 29–52.

Collinson, Laurence, The Moods of Love. Melbourne: Overland Press, 1957.

Collinson, Laurence, ‘Myself and the New Year, 1944.’ Angry Penguins (Autumn, 1944): 79–80.

Collinson, Laurence, Papers (1945–1986). Meanjin Archive, University of Melbourne Library.

Collinson, Laurence, A Slice of Birthday Cake: A Half Hour Play for Radio. HO308A, Hanger Collection, Fryer Library, University of Queensland.

Collinson, Laurence, ‘A Tender Age for Love’. Overland 53 (1972): 2–12.

Collinson, Laurence, Traitor Silence: A Play in Five Scenes. HO309, Hanger Collection, Fryer Library, University of Queensland.

Collinson, Laurence, Who is Wheeling Grandma? Melbourne: Overland Press, 1967.

Collinson, Laurence, The Zelda Trio: A Play in Three Acts. MS45608, University of New England Library.

Haese, Richard, Rebels and Precursors: The Revolutionary Years of Australian Art. London: Allen Lane, 1981.

Helmrich, Michele, Young Turks and Battle Lines: Barjai and Miya Studio. Catalogue of exhibition shown at the University Art Museum, University of Queensland, 21 September to 4 November 1988.

Heyward, Michael, The Ern Malley Affair. London: Faber and Faber, 1993.

Horn, Vida, and Astley, Thea ‘Barjai Days: Hello Barrie, Hello Laurie.’ Overland 142 (1986): 36.

Reid, Barrett, Papers (1943–1947). Meanjin Archive, University of Melbourne Library.

Reid, Barrett, and Underhill, Nancy, eds. Letters of John Reed: Defining Australian Cultural Life 1920–1981. Ringwood: Viking, 2001.

Seeman, Pamela, Papers (1917–1988). UQFL301, Fryer Library, University of Queensland.

Seymour, Alan, ‘Laurence Collinson’. Overland 106 (1987): 48–54.

Watson, Joanne, ‘Brisbane's Little Chelsea: The Cultural Legacy of the Barjai and Miya Groups’. Overland (2004): 58–62.

Wright, Judith, Half a Lifetime. Ed. Patricia, Clarke. Melbourne: Text Publishing, 1999.

Published

2006-07-01

Issue

Section

Articles

How to Cite

Hatherell, W. (2006). The Brisbane Years of Laurence Collinson. Queensland Review, 13(2), 1-12. https://doi.org/10.1017/S1321816600004396