y Oz periodical  
Alternative title: Oz Magazine
Date: 1963-1966
Date: 1966-1970
Issue Details: First known date: 1963 1963

Latest Issues

y Oz January 1971 periodical issue
y Oz Oz magazine February 1970 periodical issue
y Oz Oz magazine May 1970 periodical issue
y Oz Oz magazine October 1970 periodical issue
y Oz Oz magazine February 1969 periodical issue

Abstract

In 1963, a group of student editors from several Sydney universities founded a magazine that would test the moral tolerance of Australian society. Reacting to a social climate of regular censorship and an enduring White Australia policy, the editors aimed to challenge their readers with nudity, sexual frankness and strong opposition to mainstream ideas.

The first issue of Oz was published on April Fools' Day 1963. In a deliberate attempt to expand the audience for undergraduate ideas, the magazine was delivered to newsagents and energetically sold on the streets. So successful was this method that the magazine sold six thousand copies before lunchtime and a reprint was ordered. Circulation reached a peak of 40,000 issues several years later.

The first issue attracted immediate attention when the editors were charged with obscenity, due primarily to an article on an illegal abortionist, but also by a discussion on chastity belts. A later issue also attracted a charge of obscenity because of a cover picture of three men at a urinal and a satirical piece on the sexual exploits of 'gatecrashers'. Satire dominated the pages of Oz. While much of the magazine was written by Richard Walsh, Richard Neville and cartoonist Martin Sharp, writers such as Bob Ellis, Germaine Greer and Robert Hughes also contributed.

In 1966 Neville and Sharp left Australia for England where they established a London version of Oz magazine. Continuing the challenge to mainstream society begun in the Australian issues, the London publication also attracted charges of obscenity for a 1970 'Schoolkids' issue. This culminated in a celebrated court case that saw the editors first sentenced to gaol before being released on appeal after significant public protests and support from celebrities such as John Lennon.

The Australian version of Oz continued until 1970. Without Neville and Sharp, it took on a more serious tone and circulation dropped dramatically. The subsequent drop in advertising made it difficult to meet production costs, and so after the February issue of 1969, the magazine was replaced by a foolscap-sized newsletter which ran until November 1970.

Notes

  • RANGE: No. 1 (Apr. [1963])-no. 82 (Nov. 23, 1970)
  • FREQUENCY: Monthly
  • SIZE: 29cm; app sixteen pages
  • PRICE: one shilling and threepence (1963); one shilling and sixpence (1963-1965); two shillings/twenty cents (1965-1969)

Publication Details of Earliest Known Version

Works about this Work

Wonders of OZ Lost as Yale Steps In Helen Trinca , 2013 single work column
— Appears in: The Weekend Australian , 23-24 March 2013;
'Richard Neville, on of the key figures of the 1960s counter-culture movement, has sold his vast personal archive to Yale University after the National Library of Australia failed to make a competitive offer.'
The Sum of OZ Helen Trinca , 2013 single work column
— Appears in: The Weekend Australian , 23-24 March 2013;
Wizards Put Satire on the Map Richard Walsh , 2013 single work column
— Appears in: The Australian , 25 March 2013;
OZ Feminist Offspring Helen Trinca , 2013 single work column
— Appears in: The Australian , 26 March 2013;
The Boys from Oz Steve Meacham , 2011 single work column
— Appears in: The Sydney Morning Herald , 12-13 February 2011;
After the Oz trial Clive James , 1974 single work criticism
— Appears in: The Metropolitan Critic 1974;
The "Oz" Case : No Offence Meant 1965 single work column
— Appears in: The Bulletin , 6 March vol. 87 no. 4436 1965;
Satire 1965 single work column
— Appears in: The Bulletin , 6 March vol. 87 no. 4436 1965;
Smut and Blasphemy : Salutary Penalties Robert Klima , 1964 single work column
— Appears in: The Bulletin , 3 October vol. 86 no. 4415 1964;
Oz Trial Post-Mortem Germaine Greer , 1986 single work prose
— Appears in: The Madwoman's Underclothes : Essays and Occasional Writings 1968-1985 1986;