Editorial.
Arnold, John
ALTHOUGH I TOOK over from John Barnes as Editor of the La Trobe
Journal at the end of last year, this is the first issue for which I
have had sole responsibility. Greg Kratzmann guest edited number 81 and
I would like to take this opportunity to thank Greg for the outstanding
job he did in both commissioning the articles and then seeing them
through the press.
This issue contains a mixture of articles with three mini-themes
running throughout: one on Antarctica, the second and third on two
formidable Melbourne figures, Stephen Murray-Smith and Redmond Barry.
The issue opens with Tom Griffiths' 2007 Stephen Murray-Smith
Memorial Lecture, 'The Cultural Challenge of Antarctica',
delivered at the State Library last November. This annual lecture
commemorates Stephen Murray-Smith's contribution to Australian
intellectual life and aims to promote research and debate in the broad
areas of his interest and influence. Tom's book, Slicing the
Silence: voyaging to Antarctica, recently won the nonfiction category
prize in the 2008 NSW Premier's Literary Awards. His lecture is
followed by an assessment of Murray-Smith's legacy by his friend
and colleague, John McLaren. The issue also contains a short piece on
cartoonist Alex Gurney by Vane Lindesay, himself a noted black-and-white
artist, and also a very old friend of both Stephen Murray-Smith and John
McLaren. All three had a long association with Overland, the radical
nationalist magazine founded by Stephen Murray-Smith in 1954.
Continuing the Antarctic theme is an article by library staff
member Andrew McConville on the diaries of Keith Jack kept while
stranded for months on end with nine companions at Ross Station during
Ernest Shackleton's Imperial Trans-Antarctic Expedition of
1914-1917. Some of Jack's outstanding glass lantern photographs
taken during the expedition are also featured in the journal. Antarctica
and its opposite pole, the Arctic, along with the snow covered
Himalayas, are represented in Chris Elmore's article on the Vic
Spitzer Collection of mountaineering books donated to the library in
2006.
Redmond Barry was a dominant figure in Melbourne legal and library
circles in the second half of the nineteenth century. Add side whiskers
to Stephen Murray-Smith and he could have easily played the lead part in
a play on the life of Barry. And it would certainly have been
interesting to watch the two men debating an issue on opposite sides.
Although Barry would not have liked Murray-Smith's radical
politics, he would have been impressed with Murray-Smith's
contribution to education and commitment to free libraries.
There are two articles in this issue on books from Redmond
Barry's library, dispersed at public auction in 1881. The first, by
Fiona Salisbury, looks at some 46 books formerly belonging to Barry and
now housed at St Mary's and Newman colleges at the University of
Melbourne. The other piece is by Shane Carmody, a member of the senior
staff management team of the library and a regular contributor to the La
Trobe Journal, on the annotations by Barry on two books now held in the
State Library.
In 2007 Professor A. G. L. Shaw, a long time supporter of the
Library, donated funding to support fellowships at the State Library to
enable honours and first year post-graduate students to undertake a
concentrated period of research utilizing the rich collections of the
library. Amongst the first recipients of the A. G. L. Shaw Summer
Fellowships was Spiridoula Demetriou and the fruits of her research on
Philhellenism and the creation of modern Greece are published in this
issue.
Barrett Reid worked at the State Library from 1952 until his
retirement and is the person most responsible for establishing in the
nineteen-sixties and seventies the system of free public libraries
throughout Victoria, something that would have endeared him to Sir
Redmond Barry. But again, his politics would have not, for poet and
writer Reid also had a long association with Stephen Murray-Smith's
Overland, including taking over as editor after Stephen's untimely
death in 1988. Reid features here as a contributor to the graffiti in
the dome of the State Library which Marg McCormack chronicles.
Issue number 82 of the La Trobe Journal concludes with a
bibliography of Stephen Murray-Smith's writings on his beloved Kent
Islands and Bass Strait compiled by his son, David Murray-Smith.