Ripples of Wartime - Jean McLean

Accession Number AWM2017.580.1.7
Collection type Film
Measurement 5 min 38 sec
Object type Interview
Maker McKinnon, Malcolm
Brink Productions
Place made Australia: South Australia, Adelaide
Date made 2016-2017
Access Open
Conflict Vietnam, 1962-1975
Copyright

Item copyright: AWM Licensed copyright

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Description

Interview with Jean McLean, anti-war activist.

This is one of a series of short videos presenting some diverse perspectives on impacts of the Vietnam War. Collectively titled Ripples of Wartime, the videos were commissioned by Brink Theatre Company in Adelaide and initially presented in association with a play about the battle of Long Tan.

Original caption from production:
JEAN MCLEAN, ANTI-VIETNAM WAR ACTIVIST
Jean McLean was a founding member of Save Our Sons, a movement of women who campaigned against the conscription of young men to fight in the Vietnam War. Informed by a free-thinking family background, Jean worked with other women on a range of long-term strategies to influence public opinion as the war progressed. She studied the history of Indo-China and visited Vietnam during the war to see first-hand what was happening. Jean was one of ‘The Failea Five’, a group of Save Our Sons activists imprisoned for two weeks in 1971. Subsequent to the war, she was an active member of the Australian Labor Party and served fourteen years as a Member of the Legislative Assembly in the Victorian Parliament.

  • Video of Ripples of Wartime - Jean McLean (video)

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