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Save our sons : women, dissent and conscription during the Vietnam War / Carolyn Collins.

Save our sons : women, dissent and conscription during the Vietnam War / Carolyn Collins.
Catalogue Information
Field name Details
ISBN 9781925835960 :
Author Collins, Carolyn (author)
Title Save our sons : women, dissent and conscription during the Vietnam War / Carolyn Collins.
Publisher and/or associated date/s Clayton, Victoria : Monash University Publishing, [2021].
©2021.
Description xxix, 338 pages : illustrations, portraits, plates ; 24 cm.
Bibliography Includes bibliographical references and index.
Contents Introduction : 'A distress call' -- 1. Dress rehearsal -- Part 1 : Roll call -- 2. Rebels with a cause -- 3. The 'founding mothers' -- 4. 'Mothers are on the march' -- Part 2 : Taking it to the street, 1960s -- 5. 'Heads bowed, hands clasped', 1965-66 -- 6. Gloves off, 1967-69 -- 7. On the world stage -- 8. 'Fan mail' -- Part 3 : Keeping up appearances, 1970s -- 9. Moratoriums, chain gangs and 'falsies' -- 10. The fairlea five and the 'underground' -- 11. The final push -- 12. Rolling up the banners.
Summary Save Our Sons tells for the first time the full story of the Save Our Sons movement of Australian women who banded together to oppose conscription during the Vietnam War.In 1965, angered by the Menzies' government's decision to conscript young men to fight in the Vietnam War, a group of Sydney housewives issued a national 'distress call - SOS - to mothers everywhere'. Their clarion call was answered by women across Australia, who formed groups of their own in Townsville, Brisbane, Newcastle, Wollongong, Melbourne, Adelaide and Perth. Of varying ages, backgrounds and religious and political persuasions, they united under the Save Our Sons banner, determined to end the so-called 'lottery of death'. In 1965, nobody envisaged this would take eight long years, or that some would be jailed in the process.SOS members initially stood out as respectable voices of middle-class dissent in their sensible shoes, hats and gloves, but as the war dragged on some became more radical: staging sit-ins at government buildings, chaining themselves to Canberra's Parliament House, wearing anti-war fashions to the Melbourne Cup, hijacking an evangelical rally, and organising an 'underground' to hide draft resisters. In 1971, the jailing of five Melbourne SOS mums over Easter sparked national outrage, and was seen by some as a turning point in the anti-war campaign. Set against a backdrop of percolating social change in Australia, Save Our Sons is the first national history of the SOS movement and those who answered its call -- Publishers website.
Subjects Peace movements -- Australia -- History
Dissenters -- Australia
Women pacifists -- Australia
Social change -- Australia -- History -- 20th century
Women -- Australia -- History -- 20th century
Vietnam War, 1961-1975 -- Protest movements -- Australia
Vietnam War, 1961-1975 -- Australia -- Participation
Draft -- Australia -- History
Protest movements
Call number 2021.311
Catalogue Information 100080937 Beginning of record . Catalogue Information 100080937 Top of page .
Item Information
Barcode Shelf Location Collection Volume Ref. Status Due Date
A00949497 2021.311
General Collection   . Available to Museum Staff .  
. Catalogue Record 100080937 ItemInfo Beginning of record . Catalogue Record 100080937 ItemInfo Top of page .