Stephen Murray-Smith
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Stephen Murray-Smith AM (9 September 1922 – 31 July 1988) was an Australian writer, editor and educator.


Early life and education

Murray-Smith's father ran a lucrative business shipping Australian horses to India for the armed forces. It enabled the family to live in Toorak, one of Melbourne's wealthiest suburbs, and to send Stephen to board at
Geelong Grammar School , motto_translation = 1 Corinthians 1:30: "For us, Christ was made wisdom"( 1 Corinthians 1:30: Christ, who has been made for us in wisdom) , city = Corio, Victoria , country = Australia , coordinates = , ...
from 1934. He described his home as "bookless", adding however that his mother was "a voracious reader all her life", getting her books from the circulating and public libraries. The business, and the wealth, came "to a dead end in 1938, when the Indian army mechanised", but generosity from the school and from Murray-Smith's grandfather allowed him to remain at Geelong Grammar and complete his schooling in 1940. Murray-Smith later described Geelong Grammar as "a good but conservative middle-class school". In his position as secretary of the Public Affairs Society at the school he "invited Ralph Gibson of the
Communist Party A communist party is a political party that seeks to realize the socio-economic goals of communism. The term ''communist party'' was popularized by the title of ''The Manifesto of the Communist Party'' (1848) by Karl Marx and Friedrich Engels. ...
down to talk to us at school—under J.R. Darling it was that kind of school".Murray-Smith, ''Indirections'', p. 19. He spent a year at the
University of Melbourne The University of Melbourne is a public research university located in Melbourne, Australia. Founded in 1853, it is Australia's second oldest university and the oldest in Victoria. Its main campus is located in Parkville, an inner suburb no ...
before enlisting in the army at the end of 1941. An avid reader from childhood, he recorded that in the three years before he enlisted he read 314 books, of which only one, Francis Ratcliffe's ''Flying Fox and Drifting Sand'', was Australian.


War and university

In July 1942 he embarked for
New Guinea New Guinea (; Hiri Motu: ''Niu Gini''; id, Papua, or , historically ) is the world's second-largest island with an area of . Located in Oceania in the southwestern Pacific Ocean, the island is separated from Australia by the wide Torr ...
, where he served as a Bren gunner in a
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unit, the 2/5th Independent Company. His unit fought the Japanese at Wau. He contributed to the company's history after the war, of which John McLaren says, "His accounts of the travails of the track, the disastrous attack on a Japanese post, the hazards of allied air support, and the hilarious mismanagement of the retreat from Wau describe vividly what it was like to be an infantryman in trying conditions and at the end of a long chain of command." Murray-Smith later recalled: "The army consolidated the two important lessons I had already learned from boarding school: how to stay alive under difficulties, and the idiocy of authority." After his discharge in early 1945 he resumed his studies at Melbourne, completing an honours Arts degree in history followed by a Dip.Ed., while taking a prominent part in student politics with his close friend Ian Turner.


Europe and ''Overland''

He joined the Communist Party of Australia in 1945. In early 1948, in a civil ceremony in Melbourne, he married Nita Bluthal, whose Jewish family had arrived in Australia from Poland in 1938. From 1948 to 1951 he and Nita lived in London and Prague, where he worked for the news agency Telepress. They returned to Melbourne, and bought a house in the outer bayside suburb of Mount Eliza. Murray-Smith worked as the organising secretary of the Australian Peace Council from 1952 to 1958, and became a prominent member of the Melbourne Realist Writers' Group.''The Oxford Companion to Australian Literature'', Oxford University Press, Melbourne, 1994, pp. 562–63. He edited several editions of the Group's magazine, ''Realist Writer'', from 1952 to 1954. In 1954, with financial assistance brokered by Judah Waten, he founded the quarterly literary magazine '' Overland''. ''Overland'', said Murray-Smith later, aimed "to talk of books and writing in an unselfconscious way with the assumption that there was no reason whatsoever why 'ordinary people' should not enjoy such writing and participate in it".Murray-Smith, ''Indirections'', p. 31. In 1958, when Ian Turner was expelled from the Communist Party, Murray-Smith resigned his membership. In order to prevent the Communists taking over ''Overland'', he and Turner took the subscriber lists and hid them. Murray-Smith was determined that ''Overland'' should "avoid the dreadful humorlessness and dogmatism of the fully convinced". He continued to edit ''Overland'' until his death in 1988.


Academic career

Murray-Smith worked for the Victorian Teachers’ Union from 1958 to 1961, then returned to the University of Melbourne, as research fellow, then as lecturer, then as reader in education by the time of his retirement in 1987. He completed a PhD in 1966. His thesis, "A History of Technical Education in Australia: With special reference to the period before 1914", is one of the university library's most-read theses. He edited the annual publication ''Melbourne Studies in Education'' from 1973 to 1982. He called himself "a historian by profession" whose "special areas of historical research" were "technical education, on the one hand, the regional history of the Bass Strait area, and culture conflict therein, on the other". From the early 1960s until his death he and his family and friends camped every year on the otherwise uninhabited Erith Island in Bass Strait. He edited two books about the Bass Strait islands. In 1981 he was appointed AM. He compiled two reference books in the 1980s, the 464-page ''Dictionary of Australian Quotations'' (1984) and ''Right Words: A Guide to English Usage in Australia'' (1987), which aimed "to apply an ''Australian'' understanding to words". He intended to produce further editions of ''Right Words'', but this was one of several projects his death precluded.


Values

Murray-Smith espoused what he called "radical nationalism", adding that Australia's radicals "should not seek to destroy the past, but to build on it". In 1981 he wrote:
I am a man whose emotional roots are in a simpler, less cosmopolitan Australia. I am grateful for my years in the Communist Party and for my involvement with the Jewish community, because these events have prevented me from being just another middle-aged, middle-class ex-public schoolboy, but deep down and far back my Australia is an Australia of the work ethic, of the dunny in the back yard ... of men going to football matches with hats on; and of the expansion of the Australian suburb, surely in many respects an original and beneficent Australian "invention".


Death and legacy

Murray-Smith died of a heart attack on 31 July 1988 at his home in Mount Eliza. His family buried his ashes under a cairn at Erith Island. He and Nita had a son and two daughters. One of their daughters,
Joanna Joanna is a feminine given name deriving from from he, יוֹחָנָה, translit=Yôḥānāh, lit=God is gracious. Variants in English include Joan, Joann, Joanne, and Johanna. Other forms of the name in English are Jan, Jane, Janet, Janice ...
, is a playwright. Her play ''Fury'' (2013) explores "how the children of radical parents struggle to define themselves". She says of her parents, "For a good part of their life together ... they were completely absorbed in their ideology", but later they "were very cynical about people who stayed in the Communist Party. In fact, they were sceptical about any hardline ideologies." The State Library of Victoria has held an annual Stephen Murray-Smith Memorial Lecture since 1992, with the aim of promoting "research and debate in the broad areas of Stephen's interest and influence". Lecturers have included
Geoffrey Serle Alan Geoffrey Serle (10 March 1922 – 27 April 1998), known as Geoff, was an Australian historian, who is best known for his books on the colony of Victoria; ''The Golden Age'' (1963) and ''The Rush to be Rich'' (1971) and his biographies of J ...
,
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,
Malcolm Fraser John Malcolm Fraser (; 21 May 1930 – 20 March 2015) was an Australian politician who served as the 22nd prime minister of Australia from 1975 to 1983, holding office as the leader of the Liberal Party of Australia. Fraser was raised on hi ...
,
Anne Summers Anne Summers AO (born 12 March 1945) is an Australian writer and columnist, best known as a leading feminist, editor and publisher. She was formerly First Assistant Secretary of the Office of the Status of Women in the Department of the Prime M ...
and
Maxine McKew Maxine Margaret McKew (born 22 July 1953) is a former Australian Labor politician and journalist; she was the Parliamentary Secretary for Infrastructure, Transport, Regional Development and Local Government in the First Rudd Ministry and the F ...
.


Books


As editor

* ''Rebel Songs'' (1947) (collection of protest songs; with Edgar Waters) * ''The Tracks We Travel: Australian Short Stories'' (1953) * ''Snatches and Lays: Songs Miss Lilywhite Should Never Have Taught Us'' (1962) (with Ian Turner, under the pseudonyms "Sebastian Hogbotel" and "Simon Ffuckes") * ''An Overland Muster: Selections from Overland, 1954–1964'' (1965) * ''Bass Strait: Australia's Last Frontier'' (1969, 1975, 1987) * ''For the Term of His Natural Life'' by
Marcus Clarke Marcus Andrew Hislop Clarke (24 April 1846 – 2 August 1881) was an English-born Australian novelist, journalist, poet, editor, librarian, and playwright. He is best known for his 1874 novel '' For the Term of His Natural Life'', about the c ...
(1970) * ''Melbourne Studies in Education'' (annually from 1973 to 1982) * ''Classic Australian Short Stories'' (1974) * ''Mission to the Islands: The Missionary Voyages in Bass Strait of Canon Marcus Brownrigg, 1872–1885'' (1979) * ''Bass Strait Bibliography'' (1981) (with John Thompson) * ''Room for Manoeuvre: Writings on History, Politics, Ideas and Play'' by Ian Turner (1982) (with
Leonie Sandercock Leonie Sandercock (born 1949) is an urban planner and academic focusing on community planning and multiculturalism. Her work spans the interdisciplinary fields of urban studies, urban policy and planning and elucidates issues of difference, ...
) * ''The Dictionary of Australian Quotations'' (1984)


As writer

* ''There's No Iron Curtain: An Australian Journalist in Eastern Europe'' (1952) * ''Henry Lawson'' (1962, 1975) * ''Indirections: A Literary Autobiography'' (1981) * ''Right Words: A Guide to English Usage in Australia'' (1987) * ''The Tech: A Centenary History of the Royal Melbourne Institute of Technology'' (1987) (with A.J. Dare) * ''Behind the Mask: Technical Education Yesterday and Today'' (1987) * ''Sitting on Penguins: People and Politics in Australian Antarctica'' (1988) (an account of a visit to Antarctica in the summer of 1985-86)


Footnotes


References


Davidson, Jim, "Stephen’s Vector", ''Overland'', no.216, (Spring 2014), pp.91-97.

McLaren, John, "Bias Australian?", ''Overland'', no.217, (Summer 2014), pp.86-93.


External links


K. S. Inglis, "Murray-Smith, Stephen (1922–1988)"
in the Australian Dictionary of Biography
Stephen Murray-Smith resources
at the
National Library of Australia The National Library of Australia (NLA), formerly the Commonwealth National Library and Commonwealth Parliament Library, is the largest reference library in Australia, responsible under the terms of the ''National Library Act 1960'' for "mainta ...

Stephen Murray-Smith
in the ''Oxford Companion to Australian Literature''


Portrait of Stephen Murray-Smith
by Fred Williams {{DEFAULTSORT:Murray-Smith, Stephen 1922 births 1988 deaths Australian editors Academics from Melbourne 20th-century Australian historians People educated at Geelong Grammar School University of Melbourne alumni University of Melbourne faculty Writers from Melbourne Australian military personnel of World War II Members of the Order of Australia People from Toorak, Victoria Military personnel from Melbourne