Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Dedication
- Contents
- List of Figures
- List of Abbreviations
- Preface
- 1 Introduction
- 2 Career Snapshots
- 3 Welcome to the ABC, Ladies
- 4 The New Nation-Builders
- 5 Talent Was Not Enough
- 6 Thinking Outside the Box
- 7 Timely Escapes and Bittersweet Homecomings
- 8 International Adventures and Global Networking
- 9 Farewell to the ABC
- 10 Epilogue
- Reference List
- Index
4 - The New Nation-Builders
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 09 December 2022
- Frontmatter
- Dedication
- Contents
- List of Figures
- List of Abbreviations
- Preface
- 1 Introduction
- 2 Career Snapshots
- 3 Welcome to the ABC, Ladies
- 4 The New Nation-Builders
- 5 Talent Was Not Enough
- 6 Thinking Outside the Box
- 7 Timely Escapes and Bittersweet Homecomings
- 8 International Adventures and Global Networking
- 9 Farewell to the ABC
- 10 Epilogue
- Reference List
- Index
Summary
It was unsurprising that Therése Denny, Kay Kinane, Catherine King and Joyce Belfrage all pursued vocations as public broadcasters. Growing up within socially and politically engaged families, they were raised and educated to be nation-builders, imbued with a desire to participate in cultural, social and political discourse. From an early age they were ingrained with a veneration of knowledge and were pushed to unleash their intellect and their civic activism. They studied, worked and volunteered to serve the public good. They were impressed by the power of public broadcasting, with its democratic public service remit and its capacity to reach and resonate with the nation. It became the perfect vehicle for their activism. Although Therése, Kay, Catherine and Joyce consistently worked against systems of discrimination and encouraged gender equality throughout their careers, they did not identify as feminists. ‘Feminism’ presented an unsettling conundrum to many at the ABC in the postwar era. Conveniently, the cohort's emphatic personification of the good female citizen proved reassuring to bureaucrats nervous about promoting ambitious women to positions of authority. Therése, Kay, Catherine and Joyce enacted their own modified version of feminism; it was their adoption of citizenship as the key framework through which they embodied their social activism that consolidated the ABC's trust in their loyalty to public broadcasting cultures.
A Cuckoo in the ABC's Nest
When Catherine King bid her listeners a final farewell in 1966, she made a point to pay tribute to those who helped her fulfill her vocation as a public broadcaster. At the same time she acknowledged her own role as an obstreperous creature that challenged her parent organization:
This last moment I’d like to say what fun and glory we’ve had together, me and my long suffering, patient, generous colleagues, and you, the generous, tolerant, critical, loving listeners. It's been a high calling for me, something that only my father and mother and my husband could have strengthened me for […] The ABC, I’m sure, has sometimes rather been surprised to find they had such a cuckoo in the nest, but they’ve been wonderfully brave about it too. But without you, the listeners, the whole vision would have died twenty years ago.
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- Publisher: Anthem PressPrint publication year: 2022