Bridging Worlds – Life & Times of Gerald O’Brien
Lunchtime talk
12.00pm 01 December 2022
O’Brien held many roles during his long life – he had been a radar operator in the airforce, a businessman, a city councillor, and eventually the president of the World Peace Council. As a prominent politician he was elected during a time of change within both the Labour Party and within Aotearoa as a whole. In this lunchtime talk political historian, Jim McAloon, offers compelling insights into the social and political context in which Gerald O’Brien lived and worked.
Jim McAloon is a professor of history at Te Herenga Waka—Victoria University of Wellington. He has a wide range of interests in the economic and social history of New Zealand and other places. For some years he’s taught a second year course in New Zealand political history, and has published a number of works in the field, including (with Peter Franks) Labour: The New Zealand Labour Party 1916-2016 (2016).
This is the second in our lunchtime talk series Bridging Worlds running alongside Te Pātaka Toi Adam Art Gallery’s current exhibitions. These talks explore private obsessions in real world contexts and the ways imaginative personas enable slippage between identity categories.