Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://hdl.handle.net/2440/49182
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dc.contributor.authorWillett, Grahamen
dc.date.issued2008en
dc.identifier.urihttp://hdl.handle.net/2440/49182-
dc.descriptionPresented by the Friends of the Barr Smith Library and the History Trust of SA, 12 June 2008, Ira Raymond Room, Barr Smith Library, the University of Adelaide. Recorded at the Ira Raymond Room, Barr Smith Library, the University of Adelaide, 12 June 2008.en
dc.description.abstractIn the 1970s, Adelaide was at the centre of Australian lesbian and gay politics. Adelaide was the setting for the murder of Dr Duncan and the nation’s first (and second!) attempt at homosexual law reform and the Third National Homosexual Conference.en
dc.publisherRadio Adelaideen
dc.subject.lcshWillett, Grahamen
dc.subject.lcshDuncan, Georgeen
dc.subject.lcshGay liberation movement South Australiaen
dc.subject.lcshGay rights South Australiaen
dc.subject.lcshLesbianism South Australiaen
dc.subject.lcshHomosexuality South Australiaen
dc.subject.lcshAuthors Anecdotesen
dc.subject.lcshLaw reform South Australiaen
dc.titleDuncan’s dead but we’re alive : lesbian and gay activism in South Australia in the seventiesen
dc.title.alternativeLesbian and gay activism in South Australia in the 70sen
dc.typeRecording, oralen
dc.contributor.organisationFriends of the University of Adelaide Libraryen
dc.contributor.organisationHistory Trust of South Australiaen
dc.contributor.organisationRadio Adelaideen
dc.contributor.organisationUniversity of Adelaideen
Appears in Collections:Friends of the University of Adelaide Presentations

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