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  1. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Jack_LindsayJack Lindsay - Wikipedia

    Jack Lindsay (20 October 1900 – 8 March 1990) was an Australian-born writer, who from 1926 lived in the United Kingdom, initially in Essex. He was born in Melbourne, but spent his formative years in Brisbane. He was the eldest son of Norman Lindsay and brother of author Philip Lindsay .

  2. JACK LINDSAY (1900-1990) was a writer and a visionary, a tireless worker for social equality and justice, a polymath and cultural activist, and a deeply introspective man who was constantly searching for the meaning of individual goodness and integrity as well as for what constitutes the best form of social and political organization.

  3. Jack Lindsay was born on 20 October 1900 to artist, Norman Lindsay and his wife Kathleen (Katie), nee Parkinson. Norman was one of ten children to Robert Lindsay, surgeon from Londonderry, Ireland and Jane Elizabeth Williams whom he met in Melbourne.

  4. 27 févr. 2024 · Few people have known so much about so many things as Jack Lindsay. Even fewer have published so much. Lindsay grew up in Brisbane in the early years of the twentieth century, moved to Sydney in 1921, and then embarked on a sixty-year career as journalist, publisher, poet, critic, translator, novelist and historian.

  5. 11 sept. 2018 · Months after his final football game, University of Washington hero Jack Lindsay smiled from the deck as his ship pushed off for Alaska. It must have seemed like the greatest adventure of his...

  6. During his teenage and early adult years in Brisbane Jack Lindsay experienced the social disruption caused by the First World War and the divisive debates about conscription, the hysteria generated by the rise of Bolshevism and the Russian Revolution of 1917, the continuing rise of unionism, the fight for workers’ rights, and the start of the ...

  7. This book offers an in-depth analysis of the work of prolific writer, activist and publisher, Jack Lindsay (1900-1990). It maps the development of his ideas across the twentieth century by reference to the five British writers about whom he published major studies: William Blake, John Bunyan, Charles Dickens, George Meredith and William Morris.