PhotosBiographyFacebookTwitter

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Stuart Macintyre

Born(1947-04-27)27 April 1947
Melbourne, Victoria, Australia
Died22 November 2021(2021-11-22) (aged 74)
Melbourne, Victoria, Australia
AwardsPremier of Victoria's Literary Award for Australian Studies (1986)
Fellow of the Academy of the Social Sciences in Australia (1987)
Redmond Barry Award (1997)
The Age Non-Fiction Book of the Year Award (1998)
Fellow of the Australian Academy of the Humanities (1999)
Premier of New South Wales' Australian History Prize (2004)
Officer of the Order of Australia (2011)
Ernest Scott Prize (2016)
Academic background
Alma mater University of Melbourne (BA)
Monash University (MA)
University of Cambridge (PhD)
Doctoral advisor Henry Pelling
Academic work
InstitutionsUniversity of Melbourne
Notable students Frank Bongiorno
Notable worksThe History Wars (2003)
Notable ideasAustralian history
Class and labour history

Stuart Forbes Macintyre AO, FAHA, FASSA (21 April 1947 – 22 November 2021) was an Australian historian, and Dean of the Faculty of Arts at the University of Melbourne from 1999 to 2008. He was voted one of Australia's most influential historians. [1] [2] [3]

Early life and education

The son of Forbes Macintyre and Alison Stevens Macintyre, Stuart Macintyre was born in Melbourne on 21 April 1947. His schooling took place at Scotch College, and later at the University of Melbourne where he was a resident of Ormond College. While an undergraduate he specialised in history, and obtained his bachelor's degree in 1968. He also held a Master of Arts degree from Monash University (1971) and a PhD from the University of Cambridge (1975), for which he was awarded the Blackwood Prize. In 1976 he married Martha Bruton [1], a social anthropologist.

While a postgraduate student at Monash in the early 1970s, Macintyre joined the Left Tendency faction of the Communist Party of Australia (CPA), this faction being particularly strong at that campus. His CPA membership lapsed while he was studying in the United Kingdom, and on returning to Australia he joined the Australian Labor Party. He thereafter considered himself to be a democratic socialist. As a historian he identified with the tradition of labour historians, such as Henry Pelling, who was his doctoral supervisor in Britain.

Academic career

Macintyre had a long academic career both within Australia and internationally. From 1977 to 1978, Macintyre was a research fellow at St John's College at the University of Cambridge. He returned to Australia in 1979 as a lecturer at Murdoch University in Perth, and the following year returned to Melbourne, where he lectured at the University of Melbourne until 1981. For a brief subsequent period – 1982–83 – he was a research fellow at the Australian National University in Canberra, and in 1984 he was promoted to senior lecturer at the University of Melbourne. [4]

Beginning in 1988, Macintyre served as a reader in history at the University of Melbourne. Three years later he became professor, and was given the Ernest Scott chair in history. He was appointed dean of the Faculty of Arts in 1999. In 2002 he was made a laureate professor of the University of Melbourne. Macintyre was also a visiting scholar or fellow at Griffith University (1986), the University of Canterbury, New Zealand (1988), the University of Western Australia (1988), the Australian National University (1991) and the University of Otago, New Zealand (1992).

From 1987 to 1996, Macintyre was a member of the council of the National Library of Australia (NLA) and from 1989 to 1998, a member of the council of the State Library of Victoria (SLV). He also served as chairperson of the Humanities and Creative Arts Panel of the Australian Research Council (ARC) in 2003. In 2005, Macintyre was outspoken about the actions of the then federal Education Minister Brendan Nelson, who personally vetoed several ARC grants which had already been approved by the ARC's peer review process. [5]

Macintyre finished a second term as the dean of arts in mid-2006. For the 2007–08 academic year he held the Harvard Chair of Australian Studies, retaining his academic appointment at Melbourne. He served as president of the Academy of the Social Sciences in Australia and the Australian Society for the Study of Labour History. [6] He was also a fellow of the Australian Academy of the Humanities. [7]

Publications

As an historian Macintyre was prolific. He published numerous books, including a history of Marxism in the United Kingdom in the early 20th century, based on his doctoral thesis, a history of the labour movement in Australia, and Reds, the first volume of the history of the Communist Party of Australia; the second volume, The Party, was published posthumously in 2022.

Perhaps his most widely known work is The History Wars (with Anna Clark), a study of the history wars, a public debate about the recent interpretation of various aspects of the history of Australia. The book was launched by former Prime Minister of Australia Paul Keating, who took the opportunity to criticise conservative views of Australian history, and those who hold them (such as the then current Prime Minister John Howard), saying that they suffered from "a failure of imagination", and said that The History Wars "rolls out the canvas of this debate". [8]

Macintyre's critics, such as Gregory Melleuish (history lecturer at the University of Wollongong), responded to the book by declaring that Macintyre was a partisan history warrior himself, and that "its primary arguments are derived from the pro-Communist polemics of the Cold War". [9] Keith Windschuttle said that Macintyre attempted to "caricature the history debate" but failed to explain what he meant. [10] Windschuttle has also accused Macintyre of harbouring "a deep distaste" for Australia's British heritage and has criticised Macintyre's involvement in the academic attack against Geoffrey Blainey during the so-called "Blainey affair". [11]

In a foreword to The History Wars, former Chief Justice of Australia, Sir Anthony Mason, said that the book was "a fascinating study of the recent endeavours to rewrite or reinterpret the history of European settlement in Australia." [12]

Awards

Macintyre received many awards, including the Victorian Premier's Literary Award for Australian Studies in 1986, for his work in authoring the fourth volume of the Oxford History of Australia, and the Redmond Barry Award from the Australian Library and Information Association in 1997, in recognition of his work with the NLA and SLV. His book The Reds won The Age Non-Fiction Book of the Year Award in 1998. The History Wars won the 2004 Premier of New South Wales' Australian History Prize. [13] Australia's Boldest Experiment won the Ernest Scott Prize in 2016 and the 2016 NSW Premier's Australian History Prize. [14]

On 26 January 2011, Macintyre was named an Officer of the Order of Australia. [15]

Bibliography

  • — (1980). A Proletarian Science: Marxism in Britain, 1917–1933. Cambridge University Press. ISBN  0-521-22621-X.
  • — (1980). Little Moscows. Communism and working-class Militancy in Inter-war Britain publisher. Croom Helm. ISBN  0-7099-0083-X
  • — (1985). Winners and Losers. the Pursuit of Social Justice in Australian History. Allen & Unwin. ISBN 0-86861 470 X.
  • — (1986). The Oxford History of Australia, Volume 4, 1901–1942: The Succeeding Age. Oxford University Press. ISBN  0-19-553518-9.
  • — (1989). The Labour Experiment. McPhee Gribble. ISBN  0-86914-057-4.
  • — (1991). A Colonial Liberalism: The lost world of three Victorian visionaries. Oxford University Press. ISBN  0-86914-057-4.
  • — (1994). A History for a Nation: Ernest Scott and the Making of Australian History. Melbourne University Press. ISBN  0-522-84568-1.
  • — (1999). The Reds: The Communist Party of Australia from Origins to Illegality. Allen & Unwin. ISBN  0195547608.
  • —; Clark, Anna (2003). The History Wars. Melbourne University Publishing. ISBN  0-522-85091-X.
  • —; Fitzpatrick, Sheila (2007). Against the grain: Brian Fitzpatrick and Manning Clark in Australian history and politics. Melbourne University Publishing. ISBN  9780522854237.
  • — (2010). The Poor Relation. Melbourne University Press. ISBN  978-0-522-85775-7
  • Waghorne, James; Macintyre, Stuart (2011). Liberty: A history of civil liberties in Australia. UNSW Press. ISBN  9780522869736.
  • — (2015). Australia's Boldest Experiment: War and Reconstruction in the 1940s. NewSouth Publishing. ISBN  9781742231129.
  • — (2016). A Concise History of Australia (4th ed.). Cambridge University Press. ISBN  9781107562431.
  • Brett, André; Croucher, Gwilym; Macintyre, Stuart (2016). Life After Dawkins: The University of Melbourne in the Unified National System of higher education. Melbourne University Publishing. ISBN  9780522869736.
  • —; Croucher, Gwilym; Brett, André (2017). No End of a Lesson : Australia's unified national system of higher education. Melbourne University Publishing. ISBN  9780522871906.
  • — (2022). The Party: The Communist Party of Australia from Heyday to Reckoning. Allen & Unwin. ISBN  9781760875183.
  • Graeme Davison; John Hirst; Stuart Macintyre, eds. (2001). The Oxford Companion to Australian History. Melbourne: Oxford University Press. ISBN  019551503X.

References

  1. ^ Richard Nile (4 October 2006). "First cohort for thought". Australian Literary Review. Archived from the original on 30 November 2006.
  2. ^ Janet McCalman. "Vale Stuart Macintyre: a history warrior who worked for a better Australia". The Conversation. Retrieved 23 November 2021.
  3. ^ "Celebrated historians Babette Smith, Stuart Macintyre have died" by Caroline Overington, The Australian, 23 November 2021 (subscription required)
  4. ^ "Making the history books". The Age. 6 May 2006. Retrieved 16 November 2021.
  5. ^ Macintyre, Stuart (16 November 2005). "Research floored by full Nelson". The Age. Melbourne.
  6. ^ "ASSLH Federal Executive". Australian Society for the Study of Labour History. Retrieved 15 November 2021.
  7. ^ Tutton, Samantha (25 November 2021). "Vale Stuart Macintyre AO FASSA FAHA: 1947–2021". Australian Academy of the Humanities. Retrieved 25 November 2023.
  8. ^ Keating, Paul (5 September 2003). "Keating's 'History Wars'". The Sydney Morning Herald.
  9. ^ "Book Reviews". Policy – Centre for Independent Studies. Archived from the original on 24 March 2005. Retrieved 6 February 2006.
  10. ^ Jones, Tony (3 September 2003). "Authors in history debate". Lateline.
  11. ^ Windschuttle, Keith (8 October 2008). "Stuart Macintyre and the Blainey Affair". Quadrant. Retrieved 18 February 2014.
  12. ^ Macintyre, Stuart & Clark, Anna (2003). The History Wars. Carlton, Victoria: Melbourne University Publishing. ISBN  0-522-85091-X.
  13. ^ "History Awards". NSW Ministry for the Arts. Archived from the original on 28 January 2006. Retrieved 6 February 2006.
  14. ^ "2016 Ernest Scott Prize Winner Announced as Professor Stuart Macintyre – Prize $13,000". Articulation. Faculty of Arts, University of Melbourne. Archived from the original on 31 May 2016. Retrieved 29 April 2016.
  15. ^ Hare, Julie (26 January 2011). "Australia Day honours list goes Melbourne's way". The Australian. Retrieved 26 January 2011.

Further reading

External links