Papers of Peter Koçan and Michael Dransfield
MSS 173
Collection Title
Papers of Peter Koçan and Michael DransfieldCollection Identifier
MSS 173Inclusive date(s)
1967 to 1969Extent and Medium
Category
Subject: Terms(s)
Subject: Person(s)
Collection Description
This collection includes poems, clippings and correspondence from Michael Dransfield to Peter Koçan, exchanged in the period 1967 to 1969.
Administrative / Biographical history
Michael Dransfield was born on the 12 September 1948 in Sydney, and educated in Sydney, New South Wales. He studied English literature and language at the University of New South Wales and at Sydney University for a brief period before dropping out. He worked intermittently, living mainly in Paddington, Balmain, and Darlinghurst in Sydney and Casino, and travelled frequently between Tasmania and Queensland, visiting his large group of friends and fellow poets. His work often reflected the voices of people marginalised by society. Dransfield experimented with drugs and alternative lifestyles and was a member of Sydney's counter-culture. He was an active protester against the Vietnam War and was conscripted, but excused for health reasons.
Dransfield wrote his first poem at the age of eight and began to write regularly at fourteen. His poetry was first published in the mid sixties in the underground press that sprang up during that time of great political and social unrest. The quality of his poetry soon saw him gain a broader audience, and he became one of the most widely read poets of his generation. Dransfield's poems were published in Meanjin, Southerly, Poetry Australia and Poetry magazine, and his first collection, Streets of the long voyage, was published in 1970. He published two more books, including Drug poems (1972) which were the result of a drug-inspired poetic experiment.
With others of his generation, Dransfield rebelled against older conservative poets like James McAuley and A. D. Hope, but he often drew on traditional forms when crafting his poems. Critics have drawn comparisons with Tennyson and Swinburne, but his unconventional use of punctuation, typography and language produced unique expressions of his own time. Dransfield spent several periods in rural Australia, inspiring many poems which explore the differences between urban and rural existence. He also regularly explored issues related to drug use and the fragility of human relationships.
On the 20 April 1973, Dransfield, plagued for some time by ill health died, aged 24 in Sydney. The reputation of Dransfield's poetry remains strong. Rodney Hall edited and posthumously published several collections of Dransfield's poetry during the late 1970s and early 1980s, and Patricia Dobrez published in 1999 a significant biography entitled Michael Dransfield's lives : a sixties biography.
Peter Koçan AM was born Peter Raymond Douglas on 4 May 1947 in Newcastle, New South Wales and was raised in Melbourne, Victoria. His father, an engineer was killed in a motorcar accident three months before his birth. After a childhood of loneliness and disadvantage, Koçan left school at fourteen to work in country New South Wales as a labourer and station-hand, before returning to Sydney and to work as a factory-hand in a dye-factory.
He was sentenced to life imprisonment in 1966 following an attempted assassination of Arthur Calwell. Calwell publicly forgave Koçan. Koçan was incarcerated for the next 10 years, first in prison and then in Morisset Hospital where he studied literature and began to write poetry in 1967. He has since published poetry and prose, including several plays, as well as working in amateur theatre as an actor and producer.
Koçan was released on licence from Morisset in August 1976, and lived on the Central Coast of New South Wales teaching, acting, and writing drama, poetry, and fiction. He gained public recognition for his work and received regular support from the Literary Arts Board of the Australia Council. He graduated from the University of Newcastle in 1998 with a Bachelor of Arts (Honours) and Master of Creative Arts in 2003, and Doctor of Creative Arts from the University of Western Sydney in 2008.
Koçan has been awarded:
Australia Council Grants, Awards and Fellowships, Writers' Emeritus Award, 2010: Winner
Queensland Premier's Literary Awards, Best Fiction Book, 2005: shortlisted for Fresh fields
New South Wales Premier's Literary Awards, Christina Stead Prize for Fiction, 2005: shortlisted for Fresh fields
New South Wales Premier's Literary Awards, Fiction, 1983: winner for The cure
National Book Council Award for Australian Literature, 1983: shortlisted for The cure
Mattara Poetry Prize, 1982: winner for 'From the private poems of Governor Caulfield'.
References:
Dransfield's letters to Koçan , 1967-1969
AustLit : The Resource for Australian Literature, August 2005
'Poet who lives underground', by Maurice Dunlevy, published in The Canberra times, Saturday, September 30, 1972.
Acquisition Details
Scope and Content
Michael Dransfield corresponded and exchanged poems with Peter Koçan from 1967-1969, whilst Koçan was a patient at the Morisset Mental Hospital. The letters comprise drafts of poems by Dransfield; quotes of poems by other poets; and recommendations for books Koçan should read.
The letters also reflect Dransfield's extensive writing and reveals insights into his mental state and daily life struggles, during the period 1967-1969. One letter dated 15/X/1967, provides considerable biographical and publishing information, including poetry published in Australian, British and US magazines and newspapers, and radio and television interviews.
Access Restrictions
Other
Access: Open AccessReproduction Restrictions
Existence and Location of Orginals
Related and Separated Materials
Further material relating to Peter Koçan is located at the National Library of Australia at MS 9613 - Papers of Peter Koçan.
Disclaimer
This collection contains a variety of copyright material. Copyright is held by the creator of each item. Specific conditions for this collection are listed above. If no conditions are stipulated then the standard terms of the Copyright Act apply for published and unpublished items. Digitised material from manuscript collections is provided to clients by UNSW Canberra in good faith for private study and research only, and may not be published or re-purposed without the express and written permission of the individual legal holder of that copyright. Refer also to the UNSW copyright, disclaimer and takedown policy.