Vance Palmer, the Glossary
Edward Vivian "Vance" Palmer (28 August 1885 – 15 July 1959) was an Australian novelist, dramatist, essayist and critic.[1]
Table of Contents
38 relations: Aileen Palmer, Alfred Richard Orage, Alfred Stephens, Billy Hughes, Bundaberg, Caloundra, Christine (radio play), Conscription, Corroboree, Culture of Australia, Hail Tomorrow, Helen Palmer (publisher), Ipswich Grammar School, Joseph McCarthy, Kew, Victoria, Louis Esson, Miles Franklin Award, Nettie Palmer, Queensland, Robert Menzies, Socialism, Ted Theodore, Telling Mrs Baker, The Big Fellow (novel), The Black Horse, The Bulletin (Australian periodical), The Dingo (radio play), The Interloper (radio play), The New Age, The Passage (Palmer novel), The Sea Hawk (radio play), Two Worlds (radio serial), Victorian Premier's Literary Awards, Victorian Premier's Prize for Fiction, Victorian Premier's Prize for Nonfiction, Wheeler Centre, World War I, World War II.
- Australian male biographers
- Australian male essayists
- Heide Circle
- Miles Franklin Award winners
- People from Bundaberg
Aileen Palmer
Aileen Palmer (6 April 1915 – 21 December 1988) was a British Australian poet and diarist.
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Alfred Richard Orage
Alfred Richard Orage (22 January 1873 – 6 November 1934) was a British influential figure in socialist politics and modernist culture, now best known for editing the magazine The New Age before the First World War.
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Alfred Stephens
Alfred George Stephens (28 August 1865 – 15 April 1933), commonly referred to as A. G. Stephens, was an Australian writer and literary critic, notably for The Bulletin. Vance Palmer and Alfred Stephens are Australian biographers, Australian literary critics and Australian male biographers.
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Billy Hughes
William Morris Hughes (25 September 1862 – 28 October 1952) was an Australian politician who served as the seventh prime minister of Australia from 1915 to 1923.
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Bundaberg
Bundaberg is a city in the Bundaberg Region, Wide Bay, Queensland, Australia, and is the tenth largest city in the state.
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Caloundra
Caloundra is a coastal town in the Sunshine Coast Region, Queensland, Australia.
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Christine (radio play)
Christine is a 1948 Australian radio play by Vance Palmer based on his 1930 stage play of the same name.
See Vance Palmer and Christine (radio play)
Conscription
Conscription is the state-mandated enlistment of people in a national service, mainly a military service.
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Corroboree
A corroboree is a generic word for a meeting of Australian Aboriginal peoples.
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Culture of Australia
The culture of Australia is primarily a Western culture, originally derived from the United Kingdom.
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Hail Tomorrow
Hail Tomorrow is a 1947 Australian stage play by Vance Palmer.
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Helen Palmer (publisher)
Helen Gwynneth Palmer (9 May 1917 – 6 March 1979) was a prominent Australian socialist publisher after the Khrushchev Secret Speech of 1956 and the USSR's invasion of Hungary of the same year, which caused many leftists to leave the Communist Party of Australia.
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Ipswich Grammar School
Ipswich Grammar School is an independent, non-denominational, day and boarding school for boys, located in Ipswich, a local government region of Brisbane situated on the Bremer River in South East Queensland, Australia.
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Joseph McCarthy
Joseph Raymond McCarthy (November 14, 1908 – May 2, 1957) was an American politician who served as a Republican U.S. Senator from the state of Wisconsin from 1947 until his death at age 48 in 1957.
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Kew, Victoria
Kew is a suburb of Melbourne, Victoria, Australia, 5 km east from Melbourne's Central Business District, located within the City of Boroondara local government area.
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Louis Esson
Thomas Louis Buvelot Esson (10 August 1878 – 27 November 1943) was an Australian poet, journalist, critic and playwright. Vance Palmer and Louis Esson are 20th-century Australian poets, Australian literary critics and Australian male poets.
See Vance Palmer and Louis Esson
Miles Franklin Award
The Miles Franklin Literary Award is an annual literary prize awarded to "a novel which is of the highest literary merit and presents Australian life in any of its phases".
See Vance Palmer and Miles Franklin Award
Nettie Palmer
Janet Gertrude "Nettie" Palmer (née Higgins) (18 August 1885 – 19 October 1964) was an Australian poet, essayist and Australia's leading literary critic of her day. Vance Palmer and Nettie Palmer are 20th-century Australian poets, 20th-century essayists, Australian biographers, Australian essayists, Australian literary critics and Heide Circle.
See Vance Palmer and Nettie Palmer
Queensland
Queensland (commonly abbreviated as Qld) is a state in northeastern Australia, the second-largest and third-most populous of the Australian states.
See Vance Palmer and Queensland
Robert Menzies
Sir Robert Gordon Menzies (20 December 1894 – 15 May 1978) was an Australian politician and lawyer who served as the 12th prime minister of Australia from 1939 to 1941 and 1949 to 1966.
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Socialism is an economic and political philosophy encompassing diverse economic and social systems characterised by social ownership of the means of production, as opposed to private ownership.
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Ted Theodore
Edward Granville Theodore (29 December 1884 – 9 February 1950) was an Australian politician who served as Premier of Queensland from 1919 to 1925, as leader of the state Labor Party.
See Vance Palmer and Ted Theodore
Telling Mrs Baker
Telling Mrs Baker is a 1937 Australian radio play by Vance Palmer based on his 1922 stage play of the same name, which was adapted from a story by Henry Lawson.
See Vance Palmer and Telling Mrs Baker
The Big Fellow (novel)
The Big Fellow (1959) is the last novel by Australian author Vance Palmer.
See Vance Palmer and The Big Fellow (novel)
The Black Horse
The Black Horse is a 1937 Australian radio play by Vance Palmer based on his 1923 short play of the same name.
See Vance Palmer and The Black Horse
The Bulletin (Australian periodical)
The Bulletin was an Australian weekly magazine based in Sydney and first published in 1880.
See Vance Palmer and The Bulletin (Australian periodical)
The Dingo (radio play)
The Dingo is a 1940 Australian radio play by Vance Palmer based on his short story of the same name.
See Vance Palmer and The Dingo (radio play)
The Interloper (radio play)
The Interloper is a 1940 Australian radio play by Vance Palmer based on his 1927 short story of the same name.
See Vance Palmer and The Interloper (radio play)
The New Age
The New Age was a British weekly magazine (1894–1938), inspired by Fabian socialism, and credited as a major influence on literature and the arts during its heyday from 1907 to 1922, when it was edited by Alfred Richard Orage.
See Vance Palmer and The New Age
The Passage (Palmer novel)
The Passage (1930) is a novel by Australian author Vance Palmer.
See Vance Palmer and The Passage (Palmer novel)
The Sea Hawk (radio play)
The Sea Hawk is a 1938 Australian radio play by Vance Palmer.
See Vance Palmer and The Sea Hawk (radio play)
Two Worlds (radio serial)
Two Worlds is a 1952 Australian radio serial by Vance Palmer.
See Vance Palmer and Two Worlds (radio serial)
Victorian Premier's Literary Awards
The Victorian Premier's Literary Awards were created by the Victorian Government with the aim of raising the profile of contemporary creative writing and Australia's publishing industry.
See Vance Palmer and Victorian Premier's Literary Awards
Victorian Premier's Prize for Fiction
The Victorian Premier's Prize for Fiction, formerly known as the Vance Palmer Prize for Fiction, is a prize category in the annual Victorian Premier's Literary Award.
See Vance Palmer and Victorian Premier's Prize for Fiction
Victorian Premier's Prize for Nonfiction
The Victorian Premier's Prize for Nonfiction, formerly known as the Nettie Palmer Prize for Non-Fiction, is a prize category in the annual Victorian Premier's Literary Award.
See Vance Palmer and Victorian Premier's Prize for Nonfiction
Wheeler Centre
The Wheeler Centre, originally Centre of Books, Writing and Ideas, is a literary and publishing centre founded as part of Melbourne's bid to be a Unesco Creative City of Literature, which designation it earned in 2008.
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World War I
World War I (alternatively the First World War or the Great War) (28 July 1914 – 11 November 1918) was a global conflict between two coalitions: the Allies (or Entente) and the Central Powers.
See Vance Palmer and World War I
World War II
World War II or the Second World War (1 September 1939 – 2 September 1945) was a global conflict between two alliances: the Allies and the Axis powers.
See Vance Palmer and World War II
See also
Australian male biographers
- Alfred Stephens
- Arthur Hoyle
- Barry Dickins
- Barry Hill (Australian writer)
- Chris Masters (writer)
- Christopher Clark
- Clive Turnbull
- David Marr (journalist)
- Don Talbot (author)
- Eric Keast Burke
- Fred Johns
- Geoff Page
- Geoffrey Dutton
- Geoffrey Serle
- Gordon Neil Stewart
- Graeme Blundell
- Graham Freudenberg
- Hal Colebatch (author)
- Hugh Lunn
- Jack Lindsay
- John Bryson (author)
- John Vincent Barry
- Jon Anderson (journalist)
- Max Brown (novelist)
- Milton Hook
- Nevill Drury
- P. R. Stephensen
- Percival Serle
- Peter FitzSimons
- Philip James Ayres
- R. J. Stove
- Ric Throssell
- Robert Duffield (journalist)
- Toby Creswell
- Vance Palmer
- Vic Hall (novelist)
Australian male essayists
- Alan Gould
- Clive James
- Craig McGregor
- David Marr (journalist)
- Frank Devine
- Geoffrey Dutton
- Gerald Murnane
- Gerard Windsor
- John Stubbs (author)
- Mark Tredinnick
- Patrick Holland (author)
- Peter Coleman
- Peter Ryan (columnist)
- Roger Sandall
- Vance Palmer
- Walter Murdoch
- William Hay (author)
Heide Circle
- Albert Tucker (artist)
- Arthur Boyd
- Danila Vassilieff
- Gray Smith
- Heide Circle
- Heide Museum of Modern Art
- John Perceval
- John Reed (art patron)
- Joy Hester
- Lina Bryans
- Moya Dyring
- Nettie Palmer
- Sam Atyeo
- Sidney Nolan
- Sunday Reed
- Vance Palmer
Miles Franklin Award winners
- A. S. Patrić
- Alex Miller (writer)
- Alexis Wright
- Amanda Lohrey
- Andrew McGahan
- Anna Funder
- Christopher Koch
- Dal Stivens
- David Foster (novelist)
- David Ireland (author)
- David Malouf
- Elizabeth Jolley
- Elizabeth O'Conner
- Evie Wyld
- Frank Moorhouse
- George Johnston (novelist)
- George Turner (writer)
- Glenda Adams
- Helen Dale
- Jennifer Down
- Jessica Anderson (writer)
- Josephine Wilson (writer)
- Kim Scott
- Melissa Lucashenko
- Michelle de Kretser
- Murray Bail
- Patrick White
- Peter Carey (novelist)
- Peter Mathers
- Peter Temple
- Randolph Stow
- Rodney Hall (writer)
- Roger McDonald
- Ronald McKie
- Ruth Park
- Shirley Hazzard
- Sofie Laguna
- Steven Carroll
- Sumner Locke Elliott
- Tara June Winch
- Thea Astley
- Thomas Keneally
- Tim Winton
- Tom Flood
- Vance Palmer
- Xavier Herbert
People from Bundaberg
- Alexander Spence (soldier)
- Anton Hettrich
- Ben Courtice
- Bert Hinkler
- Betty Beath
- Bill Scott (author)
- Brian Courtice
- Cathryn Mittelheuser
- David Surrey Littlemore
- Donald Smith (tenor)
- Errol McCormack
- Frederic Herbert Faircloth
- Geoff Smith (politician)
- Gladys Moncrieff
- Jack Dempsey (politician)
- Jayant Patel
- Julie Attwood
- Keith Pitt
- Kenneth Norman Jones
- Kerry Rea
- Lex Greensill
- Lindsay Stuart Smith
- Lou Spence
- Mary Hannay Foott
- May Wirth
- Nita Cunningham
- Paul Neville (politician)
- Percy Herbert Bonnet
- Rob Messenger
- Robin Donald
- Sarah McLellan
- Thomas Williams (Australian Army officer)
- Tom Dutton (linguist)
- Tommy Trash
- Toni Hoffman
- Vance Palmer
References
[1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vance_Palmer
Also known as Edward Vivian (Vance) Palmer.