Bruce Grant (writer)

Summary

Bruce Alexander Grant (4 April 1925 – 3 August 2022) was an Australian journalist, foreign correspondent, government advisor, diplomat, novelist and author of several books on Australian politics and foreign policy.

Bruce Grant
Grant in the 1960s
Grant in the 1960s
Born(1925-04-04)4 April 1925
Perth, Western Australia, Australia
Died3 August 2022(2022-08-03) (aged 97)
Melbourne, Victoria, Australia
Occupation
  • Journalist
  • foreign correspondent
  • government advisor
  • diplomat
  • novelist
  • political commentator
EducationUniversity of Melbourne
Period1950s–2017
GenreJournalism, fiction, history
SubjectCinema, theatre, politics
Notable works
  • Grant, Bruce (1964), Indonesia, Melbourne University Press and Cambridge University Press *Grant, Bruce (1979), The boat people, Harmondsworth, Penguin, ISBN 978-0-14-005531-3
Notable awards
Spouse
Children
  • Susan
  • Johanna
  • Jaems
  • David
  • Ben

Early life edit

Grant was born in Perth on 4 April 1925, and grew up in Kalgarin in outback Western Australia. His success in a state exam won him a place at Perth Modern School.[1]

Journalist edit

Grant cut short his final year of secondary schooling to join Perth afternoon newspaper, the Daily News as a reporter. After military service, in 1946 he married Enid Mary Walters and they lived with children Susan, Johanna and James at 3 Hawthorn Gve. Hawthorn. He studied arts at the University of Melbourne, under Manning Clark (to whom later in London he became close),[2] and where he could combine the academic study with a diploma course in journalism. From that he launched a career writing criticism on Australian film and theatre[3] noting in 1958, that;

If we get a dramatist with the same poetic vision for lonely heroism as the painter Sidney Nolan and novelist Patrick White, the stage will need more air .[4]

From 1951 was employed as film critic,[5][6] by Melbourne's The Age newspaper where he was the only university graduate on staff.[7] From 1953 he also presented film reviews in a radio program on 3AR,[8] and promoted the idea of a Melbourne film festival.[9] In 1954, then living at 29 Torbay St., Macleod,[10] he left the country to become the paper's London correspondent, writing a column entitled "A Window In London",[11] then was joined by wife Enid, whose father died in an accidental drowning shortly before her departure.[12][13]

In the UK Grant covered subjects as diverse as Britain's "Color Problem,"[14] buskers,[15] Labour party disunity,[16] Malta's bid for independence,[17] London's premiere of the Australian play Summer of the Seventeenth Doll; Robert Menzies' 1956 failed attempt to negotiate with Egypt's president Gamal Nasser during the Suez Crisis; and the Hungarian revolution. Conversely he was writing features on Australian subjects, such as the Eureka Stockade,[18] a shearers' strike,[19] and education in the Outback,[20] for The Guardian, and occasionally for its sister paper The Observer,[21] whose Guy Wint wrote one of the first reviews of Grant's Indonesia in 1964,[22] which he said; "must be the model of its kind."[23]

In September 1958 he flew from the UK to Harvard University via New York.[24]

In 1964, Grant resigned as The Age’s Washington correspondent, having reported from there during the terms of two Presidents, Kennedy and Johnson.

Intellectual, creative and administrative contributions to the arts edit

Grant also wrote for magazines as varied as Walkabout,[25] The New Yorker, Mademoiselle, Playboy, Cleo, The Port Phillip Gazette,[26] The Bulletin, Quadrant, Overland and Meanjin, and was an author of three novels on the theme 'Love in the Asian Century', and of short stories,[26] poetry,[27] and essays including "The Great Pretender at the Bar of Justice," written at the trial of Slobodan Milošević, published in The Best Australian Essays 2002;[28] and "Bali: The Spirit of Here and Now," written after the October 2002 bombings, published in The Best Australian Essays 2004.[29]

He spent periods researching and teaching in universities, including as a Nieman Fellow at Harvard, and a member of the councils of Monash, where he lectured in statecraft to young diplomats, and Deakin universities.

Grant promoted Australian culture,[30] and its links with Asia[31] as chair of the Australian Dance Theatre, and the Victorian Premier's Literary Awards, and president of Melbourne's International Film Festival, and of the Spoleto Festival, which became the Melbourne International Arts Festival.

Foreign affairs edit

 
Bruce Grant, Ratih Hardjono, and Gareth Evans[32]

Grant's first book Indonesia of 1964[22] came at a time of high tension between Britain and Indonesia over the year-old Federation of Malaysia, which Indonesian leaders opposed and which resulted in the Indonesia–Malaysia confrontation.[23] He was subsequently witness to, and an influence on, centres of power in Australia for several decades, as journalist and foreign correspondent, diplomat, public intellectual,[33] and advisor to Menzies, whose letter of reference to ambassadors facilitated his reporting as Asian correspondent, and to subsequent governments from Whitlam to Hawke and Keating.

Grant was chairman of the Australia-Indonesia Institute and his book Indonesia (1964)[22][34][35] remains a classic and insightful study of Australia's relations with its most powerful near neighbour.[36][37]

From 1972 Grant advised the new prime minister Gough Whitlam,[38] who “startled officials at a meeting by introducing me as his Dr Kissinger,”[7] and appointed Grant as Australian High Commissioner to India (1973–1976) in which post he was an early advocate of the importance of Asia to Australia,[39] having asked as he diverged from his career as journalist;

Can the newspapers stop Australia from turning inward, from becoming isolationist? (Roy Milne Memorial Lecture, 7 August 1969)[40]

Grant campaigned to abolish the White Australia policy, opposed the Vietnam war as counterproductive to Australia's credibility in S.E. Asia,[41][42][43] and joined the Australian Committee for a New China Policy, urging recognition of the People's Republic of China. Through his The Boat People[44] he analysed, and promoted understanding of, the political causes and social ramifications of increasing numbers of Vietnamese refugees arriving by boat on Australia's shores.[45]

Consultant to the federal Minister for Foreign Affairs and Trade, Gareth Evans, 1988–91, they co-wrote Australia's Foreign Relations in the World of the 1990s (1991).[46]

In 2008, Grant initiated the colloquium 'Australia as a Middle-Ranking Power' hosted in Canberra at Manning Clark House in Conjunction with the Australian Institute of International Affairs.[47]

Legacy edit

In 2017, Grant released his memoir Subtle moments: scenes on a life's journey,[48] named from a phrase from Albert Camus who wrote of "that subtle moment when man glances backward over his life ... contemplat[ing] that series of unrelated actions which become his fate"[7]

Bruce Grant died 3 August 2022, at the age of 97. He was survived by his sister, Jocelyn, and four of his five children; Susan, Jaems, David and Ben,[49] six grandchildren and two great-grandchildren. He was predeceased by his sister Audrey, daughter Johanna, and first wife Enid.[50]

Awards edit

Books edit

  • Grant, Bruce (1964). Indonesia (1st ed.). Melbourne University Press and Cambridge University Press.[51]
  • Grant, Bruce; Australian Institute of International Affairs (1969), Foreign affairs and the Australian press, Australian Institute of International Affairs
  • Laking, G. R. (George Robert); Grant, Bruce, 1925–; Castle, L. V; New Zealand Institute of International Affairs (1970), New Zealand and Australia : foreign policy in the 1970s : papers read at the 1969 Conference of the Institute, Price Milburn for the New Zealand Institute of International Affairs, ISBN 978-0-7055-0266-5{{citation}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link) CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
  • Grant, Bruce; Australian Institute of International Affairs (1972), The crisis of loyalty : a study of Australian foreign policy (Rev. ed.), Angus and Robertson [for] the Australian Institute of International Affairs, ISBN 978-0-207-12472-3
  • Whitlam, Gough; Grant, Bruce, 1925- (1973), Labor in power, Victorian Fabian Society, retrieved 31 October 2019{{citation}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link) CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
  • Hickman, Arthur Thomas Godfrey (1977), Grant, Bruce (ed.), Arthur and Eric : an Anglo-Australian story from the journal of Arthur Hickman, Heinemann Australia, ISBN 978-0-85561-041-8
  • Grant, Bruce (1978), The security of South-East Asia, International Institute for Strategic Studies, ISBN 978-0-86079-017-4
  • Grant, Bruce; Flinders University (1978), Asia, war and peace, Flinders University of South Australia, retrieved 31 October 2019
  • Grant, Bruce (1980), Cherry Bloom, Aurora Press ; [London] : [Distributed by H.F.L.], ISBN 978-0-86748-000-9[52][53]
  • Grant, Bruce (1979), The boat people, Harmondsworth, Penguin, ISBN 978-0-14-005531-3[54]
  • Grant, Bruce; Grant, Bruce, 1925- (1982), Gods & politicians, Allen Lane ; Ringwood, Vic. : Penguin Australia, ISBN 978-0-7139-1426-9{{citation}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link) CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
  • Grant, Bruce (1983), The Australian dilemma : a new kind of Western society, Macdonald Futura Australia, ISBN 978-0-86771-003-8
  • Grant, Bruce (1985), Australia and the twenty-first century, Australian National University, ISBN 978-0-86784-751-2
  • Grant, Bruce (1988), What kind of country? : Australia and the twenty-first century, Penguin, ISBN 978-0-14-010681-7
  • Grant, Bruce, 1925-; H.V. Evatt Memorial Foundation (1989), Australia in a world economy : proceedings of a seminar Oct 15, 1988, H.V. Evatt Memorial Foundation{{citation}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link) CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
  • Grant, Bruce (1995), The Budd family, Hyland House, ISBN 978-1-875657-53-7
  • Evans, Gareth; Grant, Bruce, 1925-; Evans, Gareth, 1944- (1995), Australia's foreign relations : in the world of the 1990s (2nd ed.), Melbourne University Press, ISBN 978-0-522-84657-7{{citation}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link) CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
  • Grant, Bruce (1996), Indonesia (3rd ed.), Melbourne University Press, ISBN 978-0-522-84745-1
  • Grant, Bruce (1999), A furious hunger : America in the 21st century, Melbourne University Press, ISBN 978-0-522-84792-5
  • Grant, Bruce (2004), Fatal attraction : reflections on the alliance with the United States, Black Inc, ISBN 978-0-9750769-3-4
  • Grant, Bruce; Masters, Diane; Royal Botanic Gardens, Melbourne (2006), The Governor's moment, Grant Pub, ISBN 978-0-646-46657-6
  • Conley Tyler, Melissa H; Miller, Geoff (2008), Australia as a Middle Power : Report of a Colloquium on 'Australia as a Middle-Ranking Power' Proposed by Bruce Grant, Leading Writer on International Affairs, and Hosted in Canberra by Manning Clark House in Conjunction with the Australian Institute of International Affairs, Australian Institute of International Affairs, ISBN 978-0-909992-55-2
  • Grant, Bruce (2014), A young woman from China, [South Yarra, Victoria] Bruce Grant, ISBN 978-0-9925514-0-7
  • Grant, Bruce (3 December 2014), The last kiss, [Melbourne?, Victoria] [Bruce Grant] (published 2014), ISBN 978-0-9925514-2-1
  • Boston, Melbourne, Oxford, Vancouver Conversazioni on Culture and Society; Pizzey, Dorothy, (writer of introduction.); Grant, Bruce (writer of introduction.); Blainey, Geoffrey; Burnside, Julian; Kelly, Paul; Kimball, Roger; Lawriwsky, Michael L.; Boston, Melbourne, Oxford, Vancouver Conversazioni on Culture and Society (issuing body) (2014), The Great War : causes, consequences, reconsiderations : 4 August 2014 Melbourne, Vancouver Conversazioni on Culture and Society, Boston, Melbourne, Oxford, retrieved 31 October 2019{{citation}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  • Grant, Bruce (25 March 2015), Crossing the Arafura Sea, [Melbourne?, Victoria] [Bruce Grant] (published 2015), ISBN 978-0-9925514-4-5
  • Grant, Bruce (2017), Subtle moments : scenes on a life's journey, Monash University Publishing, ISBN 978-1-925495-35-5

References edit

  1. ^ "KARLGARIN NEWS". Wagin Argus and Arthur, Dumbleyung, Lake Grace Express. 18 December 1941. p. 4. Retrieved 5 August 2022.
  2. ^ McKenna, Mark (2011), An eye for eternity : the life of Manning Clark, Miegunyah Press, p. 366, ISBN 978-0-522-85617-0
  3. ^ McFarlane, Brian (30 April 2017). "Subtle Moments review: Bruce Grant's memoir of a full and productive life". The Sydney Morning Herald. Retrieved 31 October 2019.
  4. ^ Bruce Grant ·'Where Now?" originally published in 1958 in the Australian Elizabethan Theatre Trust's Australian Theatre Yearbook and was reprinted in Peter Holloway (ed.), Contemporary Australian Drama (Sydney: Currency, 1987), 60–65.
  5. ^ Grant, Bruce (10 November 1951). "Screen Review". The Age. p. 11. Retrieved 6 August 2022.
  6. ^ Review: Pandora and the Flying DutchmanGrant, Bruce (17 November 1951). "Screen Review". The Age. p. 9. Retrieved 6 August 2022.
  7. ^ a b c Grant, Bruce (2017), Subtle moments : scenes on a life's journey, Monash University Publishing, ISBN 978-1-925495-35-5
  8. ^ "Studio News Brevities Brevities". The Age. 7 August 1953. p. 1. Retrieved 6 August 2022.
  9. ^ Casson, John (17 July 1954). "How A Town Organised A Festival". The Age. p. 2. Retrieved 6 August 2022.
  10. ^ Australian Electoral Commission; Canberra, Australia; Electoral Rolls
  11. ^ Grant, Bruce (24 November 1954). "A Window in London : The Battle Of Wits In Petticoat Lane". The Age. p. 11. Retrieved 6 August 2022.
  12. ^ "Nedlands Man's Farewell Visit Ends In Tragedy". Daily News. 22 November 1954. p. 11. Retrieved 6 August 2022.
  13. ^ "Family Notices". West Australian. 23 November 1954. Retrieved 6 August 2022.
  14. ^ Grant, Bruce (17 November 1954). "A Window in London : Black Faces of the Empire". The Age. p. 9. Retrieved 6 August 2022.
  15. ^ Grant, Bruce (10 November 1954). "A Window in London : The Minstrels of a Great City". Age. p. 7. Retrieved 6 August 2022.
  16. ^ Grant, Bruce (1 December 1954). "A Window on London : British Labor Party Has Its Troubles". The Age. p. 2. Retrieved 7 August 2022.
  17. ^ Grant, Bruce (4 December 1954). "POLITICAL Stirrings IN ROMANTIC MALTA". The Age. p. 2. Retrieved 7 August 2022.
  18. ^ Grant, Bruce (3 December 1954). "Eureka Stockade". The Guardian. p. 7.
  19. ^ Grant, Bruce (10 November 1955). "Strike-Breaker". The Guardian. p. 7.
  20. ^ Grant, Bruce (23 August 1956). "Life and letters". The Guardian. p. 5.
  21. ^ Grant, Bruce (13 September 1959). "Lawler Writes Again : From Canecutters to Culture Snobs". The Observer. p. 19.
  22. ^ a b c Grant, Bruce (1964). Indonesia (1st ed.). Melbourne University Press and Cambridge University Press.
  23. ^ a b Wint, Guy (20 September 1964). "Ambitious Asians". The Observer. p. 24.
  24. ^ New York State, Passenger and Crew Lists, 1917–1967
  25. ^ Grant, Bruce (1962), "Give Our Theatre a Place in the Sun", Walkabout, 28 (9): 28–29, ISSN 0043-0064
  26. ^ a b Grant, Bruce (30 November 1955). "A Chance Encounter". The Port Phillip Gazette. 2 (2): 33.
  27. ^ Grant, Bruce (March 1953). "Bright Face Boy". The Port Phillip Gazette. 1 (3): 22.
  28. ^ Craven, Peter (2002), The best Australian essays. 2002, Black, ISBN 978-1-86395-187-6
  29. ^ Dessaix, Robert, 1944- (2004), The best Australian essays. 2004, Black Inc, ISBN 978-1-86395-237-8{{citation}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link) CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
  30. ^ Grant, Bruce (6 May 2015). "Kangaroo Tripe". Meanjin. Archived from the original on 30 March 2016. Retrieved 31 October 2019.
  31. ^ Claire Park (1981) AIIA seminar: Creative writing turns to Asia, Australian Outlook, 35:1, 92–93, DOI: 10.1080/10357718108444736
  32. ^ Evans, Gareth; Grant, Bruce (1992). Australia's Foreign Relations: In the World of the 1990s.
  33. ^ Alomes, S. (1991). The Forgotten Critics: Freelance Intellectuals in Australia in the Twentieth Century. Meanjin, 50(4), 553.
  34. ^ Australian Geographical Society (1 July 1969), "Book Reviews (1 July 1969)", Walkabout, 35 (7), Australian National Travel Association, ISSN 0043-0064
  35. ^ Monash University. Students' Representative Council; Armstrong, David (1964), Chaos volume 04 issues 1–13 1964, retrieved 31 October 2019
  36. ^ Hindley, D. (1965). Grant," Indonesia"(Book Review). Journal of Asian Studies, 24(3), 528.
  37. ^ Liddle, R. (1968). Book Review: Indonesia. By Bruce Grant. (Baltimore: Penguin Books, 1967. Pp. xi, 247. $1.65.). American Political Science Review, 62(2), 670–671.
  38. ^ Dobell, Graeme (29 March 2017). "Parallel lives". Inside Story. Retrieved 4 August 2022.
  39. ^ Grant, Bruce (1978), The security of South-East Asia, International Institute for Strategic Studies, ISBN 978-0-86079-017-4
  40. ^ Torney-Parlicki, Prudence Ann (2000), Somewhere in Asia : war, journalism and Australia's neighbours 1941–75, UNSW Press, ISBN 978-0-86840-530-8
  41. ^ Carl Bridge (2010) Other people's wars? Some thoughts on Australia's military involvements in the twentieth century, Australian Cultural History, 28:2–3, 253–261, DOI: 10.1080/07288433.2010.593290
  42. ^ Payne, Trish. Placing Australia's Involvement in the Vietnam War in Context: The Communication Roles of the Press, Politicians and the Military [online]. In: Payne, Trish. War and Words: The Australian Press and the Vietnam War. Carlton, Vic.: Melbourne University Press, 2007: 1–26. MUP academic monograph series
  43. ^ Warner, Denis (18 October 1969). "Australia at the polls: the challenge to Gorton". The Daily Telegraph. p. 18.
  44. ^ Grant, Bruce (1979). The boat people : an age investigation with Bruce Grant. Internet Archive. Harmondsworth, Eng. ; New York : Penguin Books. ISBN 978-0-14-005531-3.
  45. ^ Grant, Bruce (1979), The boat people, Harmondsworth, Penguin, ISBN 978-0-14-005531-3
  46. ^ Evans, Gareth; Grant, Bruce, 1925-; Evans, Gareth, 1944- (1995), Australia's foreign relations : in the world of the 1990s (2nd ed.), Melbourne University Press, ISBN 978-0-522-84657-7{{citation}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link) CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
  47. ^ Melissa Conley Tyler; Geoff Miller (2008), Australia as a Middle Power : Report of a Colloquium on 'Australia as a Middle-Ranking Power' Proposed by Bruce Grant, Leading Writer on International Affairs, and Hosted in Canberra by Manning Clark House in Conjunction with the Australian Institute of International Affairs, Australian Institute of International Affairs, ISBN 978-0-909992-55-2
  48. ^ Milner, C. (2019). Subtle moments: Scenes on a life's journey,[Book Review]. Australian Journal of Biography and History, (2), 183.
  49. ^ "Family Notices : Births". The Age. 5 March 1969. p. 25.
  50. ^ "Bruce Alexander Grant Death Notice – Melbourne, Victoria | The Age". tributes.theage.com.au. Retrieved 5 August 2022.
  51. ^ Robertson, Frank (24 September 1964). "Too kind to Soekarno". The Daily Telegraph. p. 20.
  52. ^ Claire Clark, "Australian Creative Writing on Asia," The Australian Journal of Chinese Affairs 6, no. (Jul. 1981): 185-187.
  53. ^ Yu, O. (2005). How Post are They Colonial: An Enquiry into Christopher Koch, Blanche d’Alpuget and Bruce Grant’s Representation of Chinese in Recent ‘Asian Writing’ (pp. 243–261). Wellington: Victoria University Press.
  54. ^ McAdam, A. (1982). Journalists and the new class. Quadrant, 26(11), 61.