Bibliography Primary sources Interview * Dorothy Fitzpatrick, née Davies, interviewed by Adam Carr on 26 September 1997, at her home in Glen Iris Papers * W Macmahon Ball papers, National Library of Australia 7851, box 18 * J V Barry papers, National Library of Australia 2505 * Brian Fitzpatrick Papers, National Library of Australia 4965 (I also consulted the Menzies papers and the Vance and Nettie Palmer papers in the NLA, without finding anything useful for this period.) Other primary sources * The Age, Melbourne * The Argus, Melbourne * The Australian Quarterly, Sydney, 1934-37 * Commonwealth Parliamentary Debates * Farrago, Melbourne University student newspaper, 1934-37 * Melbourne University Magazine, 1934-37 * Table Talk, London, 1934-37 Secondary sources * Gerald D Anderson, Fascists, Communists and the National Government: Civil Liberties in Great Britain 1931-1937, Columbia 1983 * E M Andrews, Isolationism and Appeasement in Australia, Canberra 1970 * W Macmahon Ball, "The Australian censorship," Australian Quarterly, No 26, June 1935 * F R Beasley, "The censorship and exclusion of ideas," Australian Quarterly, 24, 14 December 1934 * Geoffrey Blainey, A Centenary History of the University of Melbourne, Melbourne 1957 * Geoff Browne, Biographical Register of the Victorian Parliament 1900-84, Melbourne 1985 * Vincent Buckley, "Unequal twins: a discontinuous analysis," Arena, vol 40, no 1, April 1980 * David Caute, The Fellow Travellers: Intellectual Friends of Communism, New Haven 1973 * C M H Clark, A History of Australia, VI, Melbourne 1987 * M Clark, "Melbourne: an intellectual tradition," Melbourne Historical Journal, 2, 1962, 17 * Norman Cowper, "The control of broadcasting," Australian Quarterly, No 30, June 1936 * R M Crawford, A Bit of a Rebel: The Life and Work of George Arnold Wood, Sydney 1975 * Robert V Daniels, A Documentary History of Communism, Hanover 1984 * John Docker, Australian Cultural Elites, Sydney 1974 * John Docker, "Sydney versus Melbourne revisited," Arena, vol 40, no 1, April 1980 * Brian Fitzpatrick, The Australian People 1788-1945, Melbourne 1946 * Kathleen Fitzpatrick, Solid Bluestone Foundations, Melbourne 1983 * Eric Hobsbawm, Age of Extremes: The Short Twentieth Century 1914- 1991, London 1994 * J A La Nauze, Walter Murdoch: A Biographical Memoir, Melbourne 1977 * Mark Lilly, The National Council for Civil Liberties: The First Fifty Years, London 1984 * Peter Love, "From Convicts to Communists", in Verity Burgmann and Jenny Lee, Staining the Wattle: A People's History of Australia Since 1788, Melbourne 1988 * J A McCallum, "Political ideas in Australia," Australian Quarterly, No 16, December 1932 * Stuart Macintyre, The Succeeding Age 1901-1942, Melbourne 1986 * A W Martin, Robert Menzies: A Life, Volume I 1894-1943, Melbourne 1993 * Arthur Marwick, Britain in the Century of Total War, London 1968 * Walter Murdoch, Answers, Melbourne 1953 * Alan Nicholls, "Student life: the thirties," Melbourne University Magazine, Spring 1961 * Warren Osmond, Frederic Eggleston: An Intellectual in Australian Politics, Sydney 1985 * John Poynter and Carolyn Rasmussen, A Place Apart: The University of Melbourne: Decades of Challenge, Melbourne 1996 * R E Priestley, "The place of the university in a democratic community," Australian Quarterly, Vol XI No 3, September 1937 * Carolyn Rasmussen, The Lesser Evil? Opposition to War and Fascism in Australia, Melbourne 1992 * B A Santamaria, Against the Tide, Melbourne 1981 * Geoffrey Sawer, Australian Federal Politics and Law, Vol I, 1901- 1929, Melbourne 1956, and Vol II, 1929-49, Melbourne 1963 * Sylvia Scaffardi, Fire Under the Carpet: Working for Civil Liberties in the 1930s, London 1986 * Ian Turner, "Intellectuals in Australian life," Overland, 33, December 1965 * Samuel Walker, In Defense of American Liberties: A History of the ACLU, New York 1990 * Chris Wallace-Crabbe, Melbourne or the Bush: Essays on Australian Literature, Melbourne 1974 * Don Watson, "Anti-Communism in the thirties," Arena, 37, 1975 * Don Watson, Brian Fitzpatrick: A Radical Life, Sydney 1979 * Don Watson, "The thirties: an intellectual 'Proletariat,'" Arena, 35, 1974