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Farrago (magazine)

Student publication for the University of Melbourne in Melbourne, Australia


Summary

Student publication for the University of Melbourne in Melbourne, Australia

FieldValue
nameFarrago
imageFarrago_2016_Issue_8.jpg
image_size180px
captionIssue 8 2016, front cover
typeStudent publication
formatMagazine
ownersUniversity of Melbourne Student Union
editorMathilda Stewart, Ibrahim Muan Abdulla, Sophie He, Marcie Di Bartolomeo
founded
languageEnglish
headquartersParkville, Victoria, Australia
website

Farrago is the student publication for the University of Melbourne in Melbourne, Australia published by the University of Melbourne Student Union. It is the oldest student publication in Australia.{{cite web |access-date=27 October 2009 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20091008020028/http://blogs.unimelb.edu.au/musse/?p=632 |archive-date=8 October 2009 | access-date = 27 October 2009

Name

The term "farrago", , means a confused variety of miscellaneous things. It has been used by Edward Tylor in his book Primitive Culture. The name is included in the motto (drawn originally from the Satires of Juvenal) Quidquid agunt homines nostri farrago libelli est – "whatever men do forms the motley subject of our page" which was written on the first issue of the famous eighteenth-century periodical Tatler.

History

The publication was founded in 1925 by Randal Heymanson, who was the first editor, and Brian Fitzpatrick, who was the first chief of staff.

For a number of years, Farrago was published in a newspaper or broadsheet format. In the 2000s, Farrago switched to a magazine format, which it continues to use today.

Organisation

Up to four editors are elected annually and hold the shared title of Media Officer at the University of Melbourne Student Union, with the union secretary being the legally defined publisher. The editorship has been highly politicised in the past, and election campaigns are vigorous.

Archives of Farrago are available at the Student Union's Rowden White Library and the University of Melbourne's Baillieu Library.

Noteworthy past editors include Cyril Pearl, Geoffrey Blainey, Amirah Gust, Claude Forrell, Ian Robinson, Morag Fraser, Henry Rosenbloom, Garrie Hutchinson, Ross McPherson, Colin Golvan, Lindsay Tanner, Peter Russo, Louise Carbines, Jim Brumby, Pete Steedman, Arnold Zable, Kate Legge, Nicola Gobbo, Cathy Bale, Christos Tsiolkas, and Nam Le. | access-date = 1 November 2009

Voluntary student unionism

The implementation of voluntary student unionism in 2006 had a significant impact on the viability of student publications across Australia, as compulsory student union membership fees had been the major source of income for most. "Christos Tsiolkas was editor in 1987, and he had a budget of $280,000; we have a budget of $58,000, and $55,000 of that will go on printing. We're quite lucky, we're a well-funded institution, and the University has provided transitional funding", said Farrago editor for 2009.

Aims and content

Farrago is a magazine whose content is produced and edited entirely by students, which aims to be a voice, creative outlet and source of information for those who attend the University of Melbourne – irrespective of age, course and interests. Farrago encourages contributions from students in both written and/or visual forms, because without these it would not be an accurate representation of students at the university.

Farrago contains the following sections: News, Non-Fiction, Creative. It previously contained a Science section, which was discontinued in recent years. Farrago also features regular columns from several student writers.

Current and past editors

YearNameTicket
1925S. H. Heymason
Brian Fitzpatrick (Chief of Staff)
1926Brian Fitzpatrick
R. B. Fraser
C. Wesley Haack
Lyle J. Byrne
1927C. Wesley Haack
Lyle J. Byrne
S. Paterson Grounds
1928A. J. M. Davies
F. R. Nelson
1929G. D. Seekamp
R. T. E. Latham
1946Portia Ferguson, Arthur Watson, Abner Shavitsky
1964John Helmer
1973Simon Marginson
1974Stephen Mills
1975Richard Cooney, Rob Nowak, Imre Salusinszky and Sandy Thomas.
1976Colin Golvan and Campbell Smith
1977Lindsay TannerUnknown
Peter Russ
1978Mick Earls and Andrew ListonIndependent
1979Louise Carbines and Jim BrumbyIndependent
1980Kate Legge and Nic McLellanIndependent
1982Simon Bailey and Sara WhiteIndependent
1983Kathy Bail, John O'Hagan, Bruce PermezelIndependent
1987Christos TsiolkasUnknown
1989Katt Fetgers
Matt Healy
Megan Nicholson
Prue Walker
1990Kylie Hansen
Elise Mooney
Keir Semmens
Tim Richardson
1991Josie Ford
Chris Francis
Ande Bunbury
Tosca Looby
1992Cath Keaney
Kath Kenny
Felicity Lewis
1993Nicola Gobbo
Caroline Marks
Lizzie Glickfeld
Nadine Davidoff
1994Tim Growcott
Susan Luckman
Sean Smith
Lisa Shukroon
1995Misha Ketchell
Elisa Berg
Shaun O'Beirne
Elena Campbell
1996Martin Donald
Victoria Hannaford
Matthew Gingold
Emma Miller
1997Vanessa Sowerwine
Derek Agnew
Joe Hildebrand
Phip Murray
1998Clare Land
Julian Sempill
Aizura Hankin
1999Nam Le
Anna Rich
Nathan Lambert
Jade Forrester
2000Penny Savidis
Virginia Murdoch
Liz Hobday
Ben Moxham
2001Mark Cunningham
Ruby Nolan
Miki Perkins
Julian Drape
2002Michael Shipman
Alexandria Hicks
Angus Trewavas
2003Jacky Bailey
Ben Gook
Doug Hendrie
Michelle Scavone
2004Jessica Pitt
Jake Anson
Alon Casutto
Miranda Airey-Branson
2005Clare ChandlerIndependent Media
Zoe Holman
Tom Rigby
Jim Round
2006Thomas Arup
David Fettling
Tamar Heath
Lara Picker
2007Jonathan BrentIndependent Media
Jessica Friedmann
Sebastian Strangio
Gillian Terzis
2008Zoë BarronIndependent Media
Simon Lilburn
Hagan Matthews
Benjamin Riley
2009Gillian KilbyIndependent Media
Bhakthi Puvanenthiran
Zoe Sanders
Yoshua Wakeham
2010Rachel BaxendaleIndependent Media
Sarah Laing
Ellena Savage
Lucas Smith
2011Tim ForsterIndependent Media
Erin Handley
Geir O'Rourke.
Elizabeth Redman
2012Max DentonIndependent Media
Ella Dyson
Vicky Smith
Scott Whinfeld
2013Emma KoehnIndependent Media
Sarah McColl
Meg Watson
Sally Whyte
2014Zoe EfronIndependent Media
Kevin Hawkins
Michelle See-Tho
Sean Watson
2015Maddy Cleeve GerkensIndependent Media
Martin Ditmann
Lynley Eavis
Simon Farley
2016Danielle BagnatoIndependent Media
Sebastian Dodds
Baya Ou Yang
Caleb Triscari
2017Alexandra AlvaroIndependent Media
Amie Green
Mary Ntalianis
James Macaronas
2018Ashleigh BarracloughIndependent Media
Esther Le Couteur
Monique O'Rafferty
Jesse Paris-Jourdan
2019Katie DohertyIndependent Media
Carolyn Huane
Ruby Perryman
Stephanie Zhang
2020Bethany CherryIndependent Media
Amber Meyer
Sarah Peters
Tharidi Walimunige
2021Ailish HallinanIndependent Media
Pavani Ambagahawattha
Lauren Berry
2022Joanna GuelasIndependent Media
Nishtha Banavalikar
Charlotte Waters
Jasmine Pierce
2023Josh DavisIndependent Media
Carmen Chin
Xiaole Zhan
Weiting Chen
2024Joel DugganIndependent Media
Kien-Ling Liem
Jessica Fanwong
Gunjan Ahluwalia
2025Mathilda StewartIndependent Media
Ibrahim Muan Abdulla
Sophie He
Marcie Di Bartolomeo

The Fitzpatrick Awards

Every year, the Media Office holds the Fitzpatrick Awards ceremony to celebrate and acknowledge the publication's contributors and volunteers. The first annual Fitzpatrick Awards were held in 2009 at Dante's Emporium and Cafe in Fitzroy. The ceremony is named after the publication's first chief of staff, Brian Fitzpatrick.

Controversy

Despite the magazine's commitment to providing a voice to a diverse range of contributors regardless of political persuasion, the editorial partisanship of the publication has varied under different editors. Zoe Efron, one of Farrago's 2014 editors, noted that the front cover of a 1974 edition of Farrago consisted of an ad for the then-Labor Prime Minister Gough Whitlam. She also noted that overt partisanship was still visible more recently, with a late 2013 edition of Farrago featuring a cover illustration of Tony Abbott with the caption "WE'RE FUCKED".

References

References

  1. "?".
  2. E. E. Evans-Pritchard, ''Theories of primitive religion''. Oxford 1966:22.
  3. Humphries, Michael E.. (2007). "Heymanson, Sir Sydney Henry (Randal) (1903–1984)". Australian Dictionary of Biography.
  4. Serle, Geoffrey. (1996). "Fitzpatrick, Brian Charles (1905–1965)". Australian Dictionary of Biography.
  5. Selleck, Richard Joseph Wheeler. (223). "The Shop: The University of Melbourne, 1850–1939". Melbourne University Publishing.
  6. "Newspaper – Farrago, 4 Apr 1951".
  7. "Farrago Edition 2 2012". issuu.
  8. "Farrago".
  9. [https://trove.nla.gov.au/newspaper/article/68967042?searchTerm=portia%20ferguson "Girl editor of newspaper" Advocate (Burnie), 16 March 1946, page 4.]
  10. "Good stories, good times…and the odd angry shot". University of Melbourne.
  11. (8 October 2009). "MUSSE » A bit of a Farrago".
  12. "1990 Intercampus Edition".
  13. "Kylie Hansen a class act all the way".
  14. "Farrago » 2005 Edition 1 Editorial".
  15. "Report of the Returning Officer".
  16. (8 October 2009). "MUSSE » A bit of a Farrago".
  17. "UMSU Annual Election 2009".
  18. "University of Melbourne Student Union 2011 Annual Elections 5 – 9 September 2011 Report of the Returning Officer".
  19. (2012). "Edition 4". Farrago Magazine.
  20. "UMSU Annual Election 2012".
  21. (2013). "UMSU Final Election Report".
  22. (2015). "Edition Seven". Farrago Magazine.
  23. (2016). "Edition 1". Farrago Magazine.
  24. (2017). "Edition 1". Farrago Magazine.
  25. "Vote [1] Independent Media".
  26. "Farrago Magazine".
  27. "Vote [1] Independent Media".
  28. (2021-03-10). "2021 Edition One by Farrago Magazine - Issuu".
  29. (2022-03-13). "2022 Edition One by Farrago Magazine - Issuu".
  30. (2023-03-09). "2023 Edition One by Farrago Magazine - Issuu".
  31. (2024-03-26). "2024 Edition One by Farrago Magazine - Issuu".
  32. (2024). "UMSU Annual Election Report".
  33. (5 April 2010). "MU Student Union Online – Farrago – 2009 Inaugural Fitzpatrick Awards—The Results".
  34. "Above Water 2017". issuu.
  35. "Above Water".
  36. "Above Water".
  37. "Radio Fodder".
  38. "Radio Fodder – University of Melbourne Student Radio".
  39. "Farrago Edition 4 2012". issuu.
  40. "The Student Union Election Guide". issuu.
  41. "2017–18 UMSU Election Guide". issuu.
  42. "Editorial: Edition One".
Wikipedia Source

This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.

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