Join Professor Rae Frances, Dean of the ANU College of Arts & Social Sciences, for a celebratory reception of the new Social Sciences Building and formal launch of the 2021 ANU Alumni Week as part of the annual Allan Martin Lecture series with alumnus Dr Michael McKernan (PhD '75, BA (Hons) '72). For those with a taste for nostalgia, there will also be a presentation on the move to the new building from the memorable hexagonal Coombs Building.
Allan Martin Lecture
'Be very careful, Michael, they think up there'
(Manning Clark to Michael McKernan, December 1971)
Reflections on an Historian's Life
Being an historian was my goal from about the age of about sixteen, when I first read Margaret Kiddle's history of Victoria's Western District, Men of Yesterday. Fortuitously, and possibly unexpectedly, I enrolled at the Australian National University in 1968 where I gained an Honours degree and a Doctoral degree, completed in 1974.
With a lectureship at the University of New South Wales, I had my dream job. I recall the influence of the extraordinary group of historians then at ANU - Ken Inglis, Manning Clark, John La Nauze, John Molony, Keith Hancock, and the extraordinary spirit in the School of General Studies led by Pat White.
Later, in 1981, I took a secondment from UNSW to the Australian War Memorial to help in the immense task of leading that moribund organisation into its professional future. I caught the vision for what the Memorial could be from prominent members of its Council.
My lecture looks at the ANU years through slightly rose-tinted glasses and reflects on what I then thought was the enduring vision of Charles Bean's and John Treloar's Memorial. I ask if the Memorial, in the current phase of its history, has abandoned that vision, to its great loss.
Michael McKernan graduated from the Australian National University with BA(Hons) (1972) and Ph.D. (1975). He taught at the University of New South Wales until 1981 when he accepted the position of Assistant (later Deputy) Director of the Australian War Memorial, leaving that organisation in 1996. As a public historian, Michael McKernan conducted battlefield tours and consulted to government. He is the sole author of nineteen books and edited a variety of others.
This event has passed, but you can find the recording here.
(This event was first promoted in the ANU Alumni website.)
Location
Speakers
- Michael McKernan