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Donato Longo Donato Longo i(14994327 works by) (a.k.a. Don Longo)
Gender: Male
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Works By

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1 y separately published work icon A Historian Against the Current : The Life and Work of Austin Gough Donato Longo , Mile End : Wakefield Press , 2021 22572805 2021 single work biography

'The life and work of Australian historian Austin Gough (1926-1997) reflect the paradoxes and contradictions of Australia's intellectual and political life during the 20th century. After a difficult childhood and dispiriting early careers, he had a meteoric rise in the academy, in the UK (Warwick University) and Australia (Monash and Adelaide), with writings on the Catholic Church and a reputation as an inspirational teacher.

'An erudite conservative with a matchless flair for polemics and a taste for controversy, Gough became a harsh critic of a left-leaning academy and the radicalism of the post-1968 generation in the Labor governments from 1975 to 1996. More broadly, his critiques articulate a cultural crisis in the West as new ideological perspectives contested Australia's traditional certainties, the legacies of British colonialism and the post-War social and political compact.

'His life and work shed light on what it means to be an Australian public intellectual and academic. They also contain important lessons in personal fortitude and public audacity.' (Publication summary)

1 y separately published work icon Pens and Bayonets : Letters from the Front by Soldiers of Yorke Peninsula during the Great War Donato Longo (editor), Mile End : Wakefield Press , 2018 14994381 2018 anthology correspondence

Pens and Bayonets gives voice to the young Australia soldiers who volunteered to fight for our freedom in the Great War. They answered the call willingly, with many thinking it may be all over before they got there. How wrong they were. South Australia, and Yorke Peninsula in particular, were proud to provide soldiers for their country.

'The letters were written during quiet periods and give us an insight and sometimes graphic account of the day-to-day encounters during the Gallipoli campaign and various offensives on the Western Front and Palestine.

'Communication options abound in the modern age, but imagine the challenges of 100 years ago, with your son, brother, uncle or nephew on the other side of the world, fighting in what we now know to be horrendous conditions, writing a letter home.

'It would take months for the letter to arrive. With the letter came a connection with family that gave a belief that their loved ones were safe and, importantly, the needed hope that the end of the Great War would bring them home.

'The letters the soldiers received, many weeks after being written, gave comfort and solace to these men, and provided their only contact with loved ones.

'Don Longo has gathered many of these moving letters, and set them in their historical context, to bring these soldiers back to life.'  (Publication summary)

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