IN CONVERSATION AT MUSE
Tessa Morris-Suzuki - A SECRETIVE CENTURY
3—4pm Sunday, July 28, 2024
Muse, East Hotel, Kingston Canberra ACT
Tickets $10 (entry only) // $40 (includes a discounted copy of the book RRP $35)
Join Tessa in conversation with ANU historian Frank Bongiorno
Monte Punshon grew up in a secretive century. She lived in a society where appearances mattered, and keeping them up often involved creating silence around ancestral origins, painful memories and personal desires.
Monte Punshon refused to be labelled. She was, at various times, Ethel May Punshon, Miss Montague, Monte, Mickey and Erica Morley Punshon, moving effortlessly from the Methodist respectability of bourgeois Ballarat, to the bohemian world of children's travelling theatre, from patriotic amateur acting to pioneering radio work, from a dear old lady with perfect nineteenth-century diction, to the bad girl who frequented edgy Melbourne bars, playing a lively part in the secret drag parties of 1930s queer Melbourne.
There were social as well as personal reasons for her concealment. In a life that spanned more than a century - 1882 to 1989 - Monte Punshon witnessed crucial events in Australia's history, and her story shines a light on the hidden corners and complexities of late nineteenth- and twentieth-century society.
In this imaginative biography A Secretive Century: Monte Pushon’s Australia, Tessa Morris-Suzuki brings to life a woman who was unafraid to be, and who accepted, willingly, the price of her liberation. Join Tessa in conversation with ANU historian Frank Bongiorno.
Tessa Morris-Suzuki is Professor Emerita of History at the Australian National University, where she held the positions of Distinguished Professor and Australian Research Council Laureate Fellow. In 2013 she was awarded the Fukuoka Prize (Academic) for contributions to Asian studies. Morris-Suzuki is the author of 25 non-fiction books, including The Past Within Us: Media, Memory, History; Exodus to North Korea: Shadows from Japan's Cold War; Japan's Living Politics: Grassroots Action and the Crises of Democracy; and On the Frontiers of History: Rethinking East Asian Borders. She has also published two historical novels, The Searcher and The Lantern Boats.
Frank Bongiorno AM is Professor of History at the Australian National University and Distinguished Fellow of the Whitlam Institute, Western Sydney University. His books include The Sex Lives of Australians: A History, The Eighties: The Decade that Transformed Australia and Dreamers and Schemers: A Political history of Australia. He is a former President of the Australian Historical Association and is currently President of the Council for the Humanities, Arts and Social Sciences.
Venue
Muse, East Hotel
69 Canberra Ave, Kingston ACT
T: (02) 6178 0024