Madge Dawson
Alice Madge Dawson was an Australian educator, social worker, researcher and pioneering feminist. She created the Women's Studies course in the Department of Adult Education at the University of Sydney.
Early life
Dawson was born as Alice Madge Burton, in Echunga in South Australia in 1908. Although she won a scholarship to study medicine at the University of Adelaide the family could not afford to pay for the costs of living there and instead Dawson became a teacher, partly funded by the availability of the South Australian Education Department allowance. In this department of study teachers in the area experienced discrimination to many women around the world, the men earned a higher salary and married women were not allowed to work. When Dawson went to Sydney University similar discriminations were still in place, women were not offered the home loan scheme for married staff. Dawson took on this latter position and won the case, getting the loan.Activism
In 1937 Dawson traveled with her husband David Dawson. They visited “Japan, Germany and the USSR as well as China and the UK." Dawson felt deeply unsettled as they observed events unfolding in Nazi Germany from the ground, including a speech by Joseph Goebbels, a Nazi politician. Dawson desired to learn from their travels by witnessing and experiencing prejudice firsthand, specifically "racism, sexism, class division, colonialism, imperialism, communism, Nazism and war."Stirred by her travels, she opposed Nazi organizations alongside "the Spanish people and the International Brigade." Dawson was involved in other political movements, including an organization for Aboriginal rights, the Australian Labor Party,. She also spoke against the Vietnam War and use of nuclear weapons.