fbpx
Wikipedia

P. R. Stephensen

Percy Reginald Stephensen (20 November 1901 – 28 May 1965) was an Australian writer, publisher and political activist, first aligned with communism and later shifting support towards far-right politics.[1] He was the co-founder of the fascist Australia First Movement, alongside businessman William Miles, and he was the author of The Foundations of Culture in Australia.

P. R. Stephensen
Stephensen circa 1934
Born
Percy Reginald Stephensen

(1901-11-20)20 November 1901
Died28 May 1965(1965-05-28) (aged 63)
Occupation(s)Writer, publisher, political activist
SpouseWinifred Sarah Venus
Children1

Stephensen was born in Maryborough, Queensland, of Danish and Swiss descent. Studying his Bachelor of Arts degree at the University of Queensland, Stephensen joined the Communist Party of Australia in 1921. Upon winning the Rhodes Scholarship in 1924 he left for England and joined the university branch of the Party. Graduating, he joined the Fanfrolico Press alongside fellow author Jack Lindsay, releasing an assortment of their own writings as well as translated works. After the press ceased operation, Stephensen established his own press, lasting only a year. During this time he cohabitated with former ballet dancer Winifred Sarah Venus (née Lockyer), whom he later married in 1947 following her first husband’s death.

Upon returning to Australia with Winifred in 1932, Stephensen partnered with magazine The Bulletin to found another publishing press, the Endeavour Press, in the same year alongside fellow Norman Lindsay. Splitting from the press in 1933, he founded yet another press, P. R. Stephensen & Co., which published more Australian works before failing in 1935 due to financial stresses. Despite the repeated collapses of his publishing companies, Stephensen became a recognised figure in Australian literature, becoming vice-president of the Fellowship of Australian Writers.

During the Moscow Trials, Stephensen became disillusioned with communism. In 1936 Stephensen penned his most famous work, The Foundations of Culture in Australia, sparking the emergence of the Jindyworobak movement. Founding the monthly publication The Publicist alongside businessman William Miles, he laid down the fundamental frameworks of the Australia First Movement, which the two established in October 1941. After five months of activity, Stephensen and his colleagues in the movement, suffragette Adela Pankhurst being among them, were detained by the Australian government. Being released after the war’s end, Stephensen continued to write until his death in 1965.

Early life edit

Percy Reginald Stephensen was born on 20 November 1901 in Maryborough, Queensland.[1] He was the oldest of six children born to Marie-Louise Aimee (née Tardent) and Christian Julius (Chris) Stephensen.[2] The family lived on a small farm outside Biggenden, where his father was a wheelwright, farrier and coffin-maker; he later took over the town's general store.[3] His father was the secretary of the local branch of the Workers' Political Organisation and his mother was the Biggenden correspondent for the Maryborough Chronicle.[4] Stephensen's paternal grandparents were Danish immigrants who had arrived in Queensland in the 1870s, converting from Lutheranism to Anglicanism and anglicising their surname from the original "Steffensen". Their children rapidly assimilated into the local community and did not learn Danish.[5] Stephensen's mother and maternal grandparents were immigrants from the Swiss French colony at Chabag, Russia (now Ukraine); his mother was bilingual in French and English. Stephensen's maternal grandfather Henry Tardent was an agricultural scientist who managed an experimental farm and later became a journalist and writer.[3] Stephensen's youngest brother, Cyril Edward (Ted), served with the RAAF during World War II and was shot down over France and killed in May 1944.

Stephensen learned to shoot and ride at a young age, as was typical at the time. He began his education at Biggenden Primary School and in 1914 placed within the top 100 students in the state secondary school examinations. This entitled him to a two-year government-funded scholarship, and in 1915 he began boarding at Maryborough Boys' Grammar School.[6] The school's headmaster Noble Wallace was a strict disciplinarian and employed corporal punishment. Stephensen was nicknamed "Chicken" at school, due to his surname containing the word "hen". In his first year he had his wrist broken in a hazing ritual.[7] He became a platoon leader in the school cadets and was also a talented sportsman, captaining the school's cricket and football teams and winning prizes for athletics. In 1916 he won a two-year extension to his scholarship by passing the junior public examination.[8] Stephensen was chosen as a prefect in 1918, his fourth and final year at the school. For a brief period he was taught by V. Gordon Childe, whose socialist and pacifist beliefs prompted community opposition and led to his early resignation.[9] Towards the end of the year, Stephensen led a student boycott of the school's speech day, at which the annual prizes were to be handed out by the state treasurer Ted Theodore. The boycott was in protest at the sacking of Wallace by the board of trustees.[10]

In 1919, aged 17, Stephensen moved to Brisbane and enrolled in the University of Queensland.[11] He was a fee-paying student as he had failed to win one of the few scholarships then available. He boarded at St John's College, where he soon received the nickname "Inky" for his habit of singing the chorus from "Mademoiselle from Armentières".[12] Stephensen befriended Jack Lindsay, son of Norman Lindsay, who in turn introduced him to Theodore Whitherby.[13] He also became involved with the Workers' Educational Association (WEA) and developed a friendship with Fred Paterson, who would later become the only Communist Party MP elected to an Australian parliament.[14] In June 1919 Stephensen's first published article in the University Magazine called for the "fostering of a national literature" and greater study of Australian poets, themes he would return to later in his career.[15]

Stephensen joined the Communist Party of Australia in 1921. He gained a second-class honours degree in Modern Greats at Queen's College, Oxford where he studied as a Rhodes Scholar and was a member of the university branch of the Communist Party with A. J. P. Taylor, Graham Greene and Tom Driberg.[1]

Literary work edit

Stephensen was a friend of D. H. Lawrence and edited the first uncensored version of Lady Chatterley's Lover. He was also friendly with Aldous Huxley.[16]

His most significant work was The Foundations of Culture in Australia (1936), which led to the foundation of the Jindyworobak Movement.

Between the world wars, his Fellowship of Australian Writers released a document that advocated disconnection from the United States and stated, "US comics promoted demonology, witchcraft and voodooism, with Superman part of a raving mad view of the world". Of American musicals and minstrel shows, he wrote: "the American negro, with his jungle is not welcome here". He was also noted for his anti-Semitic views in this period.[1] However, Stephensen was a supporter of Aboriginal rights, and he and his colleague, retired businessman W. J. Miles, financed the first Aboriginal publication, The Abo Call, written and edited by Aboriginal activist Jack Patten.

He edited all but four of the books of writer Frank Clune.[17]

Far-right politics edit

In 1936, Stephensen and Miles founded a magazine, The Publicist, which promulgated monarchical, pro-fascist, anti-Semitic, anti-Communist and pro-Aboriginal views. In the early 1940s, Miles curtailed his activities, due to increasing ill health. Stephensen founded the Australia First Movement in October 1941, and took over the editorship of the magazine in early 1942,[18] shortly before being interned at the Loveday Camp in rural South Australia without trial, along with other members of the Australia First Movement, for pro-Japanese and Axis sympathies.[1]

Bibliography edit

Stephensen was a prolific author. He published over 30 books, as well as translations of works by Vladimir Lenin and Friedrich Nietzsche. He also produced nearly 70 books ghostwritten for Frank Clune.

Non fiction

  • The Bushwackers: Sketches of Life in the Australian Outback (London: Mandrake Press, [1929?])
  • The Legend of Aleister Crowley (London: Mandrake Press, 1930)
  • The Foundations of Culture in Australia: An Essay Towards National Self Respect (Gordon, N.S.W.: W.J. Miles, 1936)
  • The History and Description of Sydney Harbour (Adelaide: Rigby, 1966)

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d e Munro, Craig (2000). Stephensen, Percy Reginald (1901 - 1965). Melbourne University Press. from the original on 21 December 2006. Retrieved 28 October 2013.
  2. ^ "Marie Louse Amee Tardent b. 27 Aug 1882 d. 23 May 1970 Surfers Paradise, Queensland, Australia: Queensland Family Trees". from the original on 8 October 2023. Retrieved 27 January 2021.
  3. ^ a b Munro 1992, pp. 4–5.
  4. ^ Munro 1992, p. 5.
  5. ^ Munro 1992, p. 4.
  6. ^ Munro 1992, p. 6.
  7. ^ Munro 1992, p. 7.
  8. ^ Munro 1992, p. 8.
  9. ^ Munro 1992, p. 9.
  10. ^ Munro 1992, p. 10.
  11. ^ Munro 1992, p. 12.
  12. ^ Munro 1992, p. 13.
  13. ^ Munro 1992, p. 14.
  14. ^ Munro 1992, p. 16.
  15. ^ Munro 1992, p. 15.
  16. ^ (PDF). Fraser Coast Regional Council. 2007. Archived from the original (PDF) on 4 March 2016. Retrieved 22 November 2015.
  17. ^ Andrighetti, Jim (December 1999). "Books from behind barbed wire". Biblionews and Australian Notes & Queries. 24 (4): 122–123.
  18. ^ Cunneen, Chris. Miles, William John (1871–1942). Australian National University. from the original on 29 January 2020. Retrieved 4 April 2020. {{cite book}}: |website= ignored (help)

Further reading edit

  • Fitzpatrick, Georgina (2007). "Inky Stephensen's internment experiences in Australia: letters to his wife (1942–45)" (PDF). Eras. 9. Monash University.
  • Munro, Craig (1992). Inky Stephensen: Wild Man of Letters (PDF). University of Queensland Press. ISBN 0702223891.

stephensen, percy, reginald, stephensen, november, 1901, 1965, australian, writer, publisher, political, activist, first, aligned, with, communism, later, shifting, support, towards, right, politics, founder, fascist, australia, first, movement, alongside, bus. Percy Reginald Stephensen 20 November 1901 28 May 1965 was an Australian writer publisher and political activist first aligned with communism and later shifting support towards far right politics 1 He was the co founder of the fascist Australia First Movement alongside businessman William Miles and he was the author of The Foundations of Culture in Australia P R StephensenStephensen circa 1934BornPercy Reginald Stephensen 1901 11 20 20 November 1901Maryborough Queensland AustraliaDied28 May 1965 1965 05 28 aged 63 Sydney New South Wales AustraliaOccupation s Writer publisher political activistSpouseWinifred Sarah VenusChildren1 Stephensen was born in Maryborough Queensland of Danish and Swiss descent Studying his Bachelor of Arts degree at the University of Queensland Stephensen joined the Communist Party of Australia in 1921 Upon winning the Rhodes Scholarship in 1924 he left for England and joined the university branch of the Party Graduating he joined the Fanfrolico Press alongside fellow author Jack Lindsay releasing an assortment of their own writings as well as translated works After the press ceased operation Stephensen established his own press lasting only a year During this time he cohabitated with former ballet dancer Winifred Sarah Venus nee Lockyer whom he later married in 1947 following her first husband s death Upon returning to Australia with Winifred in 1932 Stephensen partnered with magazine The Bulletin to found another publishing press the Endeavour Press in the same year alongside fellow Norman Lindsay Splitting from the press in 1933 he founded yet another press P R Stephensen amp Co which published more Australian works before failing in 1935 due to financial stresses Despite the repeated collapses of his publishing companies Stephensen became a recognised figure in Australian literature becoming vice president of the Fellowship of Australian Writers During the Moscow Trials Stephensen became disillusioned with communism In 1936 Stephensen penned his most famous work The Foundations of Culture in Australia sparking the emergence of the Jindyworobak movement Founding the monthly publication The Publicist alongside businessman William Miles he laid down the fundamental frameworks of the Australia First Movement which the two established in October 1941 After five months of activity Stephensen and his colleagues in the movement suffragette Adela Pankhurst being among them were detained by the Australian government Being released after the war s end Stephensen continued to write until his death in 1965 Contents 1 Early life 2 Literary work 3 Far right politics 4 Bibliography 5 References 6 Further readingEarly life editPercy Reginald Stephensen was born on 20 November 1901 in Maryborough Queensland 1 He was the oldest of six children born to Marie Louise Aimee nee Tardent and Christian Julius Chris Stephensen 2 The family lived on a small farm outside Biggenden where his father was a wheelwright farrier and coffin maker he later took over the town s general store 3 His father was the secretary of the local branch of the Workers Political Organisation and his mother was the Biggenden correspondent for the Maryborough Chronicle 4 Stephensen s paternal grandparents were Danish immigrants who had arrived in Queensland in the 1870s converting from Lutheranism to Anglicanism and anglicising their surname from the original Steffensen Their children rapidly assimilated into the local community and did not learn Danish 5 Stephensen s mother and maternal grandparents were immigrants from the Swiss French colony at Chabag Russia now Ukraine his mother was bilingual in French and English Stephensen s maternal grandfather Henry Tardent was an agricultural scientist who managed an experimental farm and later became a journalist and writer 3 Stephensen s youngest brother Cyril Edward Ted served with the RAAF during World War II and was shot down over France and killed in May 1944 Stephensen learned to shoot and ride at a young age as was typical at the time He began his education at Biggenden Primary School and in 1914 placed within the top 100 students in the state secondary school examinations This entitled him to a two year government funded scholarship and in 1915 he began boarding at Maryborough Boys Grammar School 6 The school s headmaster Noble Wallace was a strict disciplinarian and employed corporal punishment Stephensen was nicknamed Chicken at school due to his surname containing the word hen In his first year he had his wrist broken in a hazing ritual 7 He became a platoon leader in the school cadets and was also a talented sportsman captaining the school s cricket and football teams and winning prizes for athletics In 1916 he won a two year extension to his scholarship by passing the junior public examination 8 Stephensen was chosen as a prefect in 1918 his fourth and final year at the school For a brief period he was taught by V Gordon Childe whose socialist and pacifist beliefs prompted community opposition and led to his early resignation 9 Towards the end of the year Stephensen led a student boycott of the school s speech day at which the annual prizes were to be handed out by the state treasurer Ted Theodore The boycott was in protest at the sacking of Wallace by the board of trustees 10 In 1919 aged 17 Stephensen moved to Brisbane and enrolled in the University of Queensland 11 He was a fee paying student as he had failed to win one of the few scholarships then available He boarded at St John s College where he soon received the nickname Inky for his habit of singing the chorus from Mademoiselle from Armentieres 12 Stephensen befriended Jack Lindsay son of Norman Lindsay who in turn introduced him to Theodore Whitherby 13 He also became involved with the Workers Educational Association WEA and developed a friendship with Fred Paterson who would later become the only Communist Party MP elected to an Australian parliament 14 In June 1919 Stephensen s first published article in the University Magazine called for the fostering of a national literature and greater study of Australian poets themes he would return to later in his career 15 Stephensen joined the Communist Party of Australia in 1921 He gained a second class honours degree in Modern Greats at Queen s College Oxford where he studied as a Rhodes Scholar and was a member of the university branch of the Communist Party with A J P Taylor Graham Greene and Tom Driberg 1 Literary work editStephensen was a friend of D H Lawrence and edited the first uncensored version of Lady Chatterley s Lover He was also friendly with Aldous Huxley 16 His most significant work was The Foundations of Culture in Australia 1936 which led to the foundation of the Jindyworobak Movement Between the world wars his Fellowship of Australian Writers released a document that advocated disconnection from the United States and stated US comics promoted demonology witchcraft and voodooism with Superman part of a raving mad view of the world Of American musicals and minstrel shows he wrote the American negro with his jungle is not welcome here He was also noted for his anti Semitic views in this period 1 However Stephensen was a supporter of Aboriginal rights and he and his colleague retired businessman W J Miles financed the first Aboriginal publication The Abo Call written and edited by Aboriginal activist Jack Patten He edited all but four of the books of writer Frank Clune 17 Far right politics editIn 1936 Stephensen and Miles founded a magazine The Publicist which promulgated monarchical pro fascist anti Semitic anti Communist and pro Aboriginal views In the early 1940s Miles curtailed his activities due to increasing ill health Stephensen founded the Australia First Movement in October 1941 and took over the editorship of the magazine in early 1942 18 shortly before being interned at the Loveday Camp in rural South Australia without trial along with other members of the Australia First Movement for pro Japanese and Axis sympathies 1 Bibliography editStephensen was a prolific author He published over 30 books as well as translations of works by Vladimir Lenin and Friedrich Nietzsche He also produced nearly 70 books ghostwritten for Frank Clune Non fiction The Bushwackers Sketches of Life in the Australian Outback London Mandrake Press 1929 The Legend of Aleister Crowley London Mandrake Press 1930 The Foundations of Culture in Australia An Essay Towards National Self Respect Gordon N S W W J Miles 1936 The History and Description of Sydney Harbour Adelaide Rigby 1966 References edit a b c d e Munro Craig 2000 Stephensen Percy Reginald 1901 1965 Melbourne University Press Archived from the original on 21 December 2006 Retrieved 28 October 2013 Marie Louse Amee Tardent b 27 Aug 1882 d 23 May 1970 Surfers Paradise Queensland Australia Queensland Family Trees Archived from the original on 8 October 2023 Retrieved 27 January 2021 a b Munro 1992 pp 4 5 Munro 1992 p 5 Munro 1992 p 4 Munro 1992 p 6 Munro 1992 p 7 Munro 1992 p 8 Munro 1992 p 9 Munro 1992 p 10 Munro 1992 p 12 Munro 1992 p 13 Munro 1992 p 14 Munro 1992 p 16 Munro 1992 p 15 Achiever s Walk Ordinary Australians doing extraordinary things PDF Fraser Coast Regional Council 2007 Archived from the original PDF on 4 March 2016 Retrieved 22 November 2015 Andrighetti Jim December 1999 Books from behind barbed wire Biblionews and Australian Notes amp Queries 24 4 122 123 Cunneen Chris Miles William John 1871 1942 Australian National University Archived from the original on 29 January 2020 Retrieved 4 April 2020 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a website ignored help Further reading editFitzpatrick Georgina 2007 Inky Stephensen s internment experiences in Australia letters to his wife 1942 45 PDF Eras 9 Monash University Munro Craig 1992 Inky Stephensen Wild Man of Letters PDF University of Queensland Press ISBN 0702223891 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title P R Stephensen amp oldid 1223462313, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.