翻訳と辞書
Words near each other
・ Bob Goodrich
・ Bob Goodridge
・ Bob Goody
・ Bob Gordon
・ Bob Gordon (Canadian intelligence)
・ Bob Gordon (saxophonist)
・ Bob Gorinski
・ Bob Gorman
・ Bob Gormley
・ Bob Gormly
・ Bob Gosani
・ Bob Goslin
・ Bob Gosse
・ Bob Gottlieb
・ Bob Gould
Bob Gould (activist)
・ Bob Gould (rugby union)
・ Bob Gourley
・ Bob Gracie
・ Bob Graham
・ Bob Graham (author/illustrator)
・ Bob Graham (disambiguation)
・ Bob Graham (ice hockey)
・ Bob Graham (New South Wales politician)
・ Bob Graham (Tasmanian politician)
・ Bob Graham Center for Public Service
・ Bob Graham presidential campaign, 2004
・ Bob Graham Round
・ Bob Grant
・ Bob Grant (actor)


Dictionary Lists
翻訳と辞書 辞書検索 [ 開発暫定版 ]
スポンサード リンク

Bob Gould (activist) : ウィキペディア英語版
Bob Gould (activist)

Robert Stephen "Bob" Gould (1937 – 22 May 2011) was an Australian activist and bookseller. He was a leader of the anti-conscription movement, and of protests against Australian involvement in the Vietnam War, in the 1960s. He went on to become a successful second-hand bookseller.
==Politics and activism==
Gould first came to public attention in 1966 as Convenor of the Vietnam Action Campaign, a group opposed to conscription and participation in the Vietnam War. Gould was already being described as a "habitual protestor". By 1969 Gould was seen as having influence over Labor Clubs at the University of Sydney, the University of New South Wales and Macquarie University.
Gould went on to fight for many other issues, including Irish civil rights, Indonesian atrocities in East Timor, and the war on Iraq. He was a prolific writer on the many causes in which he believed. The Australian Security Intelligence Organisation (ASIO) held a file on Gould that ran to 8000 pages.
He inspired organisations like the scandalously named but nobly aspirational SCREW (the Society for the Cultivation of Revolution Everywhere) and the more sober High School Students Against the Vietnam War. He was also a key supporter of the anti-conscription movement of this time.
In 1966 Gould helped to chase and capture the attempted assassin of Labor leader Arthur Calwell.
Bob Gould joined the Australian Labor Party at the age of 17, about 1954, and remained a member of that party throughout his life.
He joined the party just as the Labor Party split of 1955 was brewing and quickly became embroiled in the struggle against the right-wing Groupers. Gould wrote about some of his experiences at that time in his essay, (Bob Santamaria and Bob Gould ).
While he was involved in the struggle against the Groupers, Gould has written that he was also "in the orbit" of the Communist Party of Australia, but he broke with Communist Party influence in 1956, after Khruschev's Secret Speech and the USSR's invasion of Hungary.
He obtained copies of Khruschev's speech detailing the crimes of Stalin, and distributed them to members of the Communist Party and left-wing members of the Labor Party.
Gould then made contact with Australian Trotskyists, who had opposed Joseph Stalin and Stalinism from the beginning. This group included the ironworkers union activist Nick Origlass, who worked in the Balmain shipyards and had led an (important strike ) there in 1945.
Gould at this time was also in contact with Helen Palmer, who organised a leftist magazine, ''Outlook'', which served as a focus for anti-Stalinist leftists who had left the Communist Party because of the 1956 events.
Gould remained a self-described anti-Stalinist Marxist for the rest of his life.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
ウィキペディアで「Bob Gould (activist)」の詳細全文を読む



スポンサード リンク
翻訳と辞書 : 翻訳のためのインターネットリソース

Copyright(C) kotoba.ne.jp 1997-2016. All Rights Reserved.