Jessie Street: A Revised AutobiographyFederation Press, 2004 - 246 páginas Jessie Street was a key figure in Australian political life for over 50 years. She was the only Australian woman delegate at the founding of the United Nations in 1945; the initiator of the 1967 "Aboriginal" amendment of the Australian Constitution; the colleague of Pablo Picasso on the World Peace Council Executive; and a controversial promoter of the Soviet Union during the Cold War, known as "Red Jessie" to a generation of Australians. She led an extraordinary, vivid life. Her autobiography, written with candour and humour, is a guidebook to the 20th century. From Jessie's early life in the Australian bush, readers join suffragette marches in London; hear civil rights singers in the jazz clubs of New York; visit occupied Egypt, imperial India, outback Australia, Stalin's Moscow; witness the Anschluss and Sudetenland crises in Europe in 1938; and see the destroyed cities of London, Berlin, Leningrad, and Hiroshima after the Second World War. Her life was one dedicated to peace and justice. The daughter-in-law, wife and mother of three Chief Justices, she met and worked with extraordinary figures such as Eleanor Roosevelt, Nancy Astor, Margaret Sanger, Jawaharal Nehru and many others. Her autobiography, first published in 1966, is now reissued, corrected and edited, a sparkling, powerful, bright book that truly reflects Jessie Street's energy, charm and practical humanitarianism. |
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Página 8
... turned 12 , the Queen died . My unfettered enjoyment of life at Yulgilbar also ended around this time . My parents placed many new restrictions on me - when it was hot I had to come inside , and I had to practise the piano more ...
... turned 12 , the Queen died . My unfettered enjoyment of life at Yulgilbar also ended around this time . My parents placed many new restrictions on me - when it was hot I had to come inside , and I had to practise the piano more ...
Página 10
... turned out that this woman was on the Board of Trustees of a new school started in the old family home of Lord Carrington , Wycombe Abbey , at High Wycombe in Buckinghamshire . The headmistress was Miss Frances Dove , a gra- duate of ...
... turned out that this woman was on the Board of Trustees of a new school started in the old family home of Lord Carrington , Wycombe Abbey , at High Wycombe in Buckinghamshire . The headmistress was Miss Frances Dove , a gra- duate of ...
Página 19
... would not go to University and suggested when I turned 18 in April that I should ' come out. Jessie Lillingston in her debutante gown , Sydney 1908 London studio portrait , about 1914. 19 OH , MY DAUGHTER ! Jessie Lillingston in Sydney, ...
... would not go to University and suggested when I turned 18 in April that I should ' come out. Jessie Lillingston in her debutante gown , Sydney 1908 London studio portrait , about 1914. 19 OH , MY DAUGHTER ! Jessie Lillingston in Sydney, ...
Página 20
... turned him for home . As I slowly rode up to the stableyard , to my horror I saw the figure leaning on the fence was my father . He was even more horrified to see me . After I dismounted and was taken to my room , my face washed and a ...
... turned him for home . As I slowly rode up to the stableyard , to my horror I saw the figure leaning on the fence was my father . He was even more horrified to see me . After I dismounted and was taken to my room , my face washed and a ...
Página 23
... turning round and looking at me , I just loved driving tandem - it was almost like flying . The groom quite entered into the spirit of it and groomed the horses until they shone , and I was the cynosure of all the district as no one ...
... turning round and looking at me , I just loved driving tandem - it was almost like flying . The groom quite entered into the spirit of it and groomed the horses until they shone , and I was the cynosure of all the district as no one ...
Contenido
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11 | |
16 | |
19 | |
25 | |
35 | |
39 | |
Jessie Lillingston in New York 1915 | 47 |
Jessie Street at home 1943 | 135 |
Jessie Street with team examining Australian sheepskins 1943 | 146 |
Jessie Street United Associations of Women colleagues 1943 | 153 |
Our great ally A Pacific war A bid for Parliament | 154 |
Delegates to the Womans Charter Conference Sydney 1943 | 171 |
Australian delegates to the UN founding conference San Francisco 1945 | 179 |
Jessie Street with Dr Bertha Lutz San Francisco 1945 | 186 |
Waltzing Matilda | 187 |
International women Votes for women At Waverley House | 49 |
Jessie Kenneth Street with children Belinda Philippa and Roger 1924 | 61 |
Seeing the World | 71 |
Charles Lillingston and Jessie Street Switzerland 1930 | 76 |
Laurence Street and Nurse Musgrave about 1935 | 83 |
The Palais des Nations Geneva 1930 | 97 |
Voyaging Depression At home At work Nurses | 100 |
Jessie Street 1938 | 117 |
Friends and Enemies | 133 |
Jessie Street in the USSR 1945 | 205 |
Vijay Lakshmi Pandit Jessie Street New York 1945 | 215 |
Seeing the States London lights Berlin bereaved | 217 |
Officials at the World Peace Council Conference in East Berlin 1952 | 222 |
Jessie Street in China in 1958 | 228 |
Jessie Street in Australias outback 1957 | 234 |
Index | 239 |
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Términos y frases comunes
arranged arrived asked Australia became British building called Club committee conference decided delegates discuss elected England enjoyed equal Father formed gave German girls give hand held House independence interested invited Italy Jessie joined knew Labor later League of Nations leave letters lived London looked lovely married meeting Minister Miss months morning Moscow mother needed never night opened opportunity organisations Party Philippa received reports returned round seemed social soon Soviet status stay Street Sydney taken talk things thought told took trade train turned Union United United Associations United Nations University USSR wanted week woman women workers young Yulgilbar