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  1. www.vam.ac.uk › articles › oz-magazine-archiveOz magazine archive - V&A

    The Felix Dennis Oz Archive includes items related to the Oz Obscenity Trial, including badges, shirts, stickers and flyers distributed on the streets in 1971. It also includes a typescript of 'God Save Us' by John Lennon and Yoko Ono.

  2. Jul 27, 2017 · The Felix Dennis OZ archive is vast and occupies over 50 boxes with a variety of material. This spans a full run of the magazine; page mock-ups detailing printing instructions; articles and artwork; fan mail and hate mail; subscriptions; business papers; documents relating to the obscenity trial; paintings; photographs; posters and Felix’s personal library.

  3. The Felix Dennis OZ archive spans a broad range of material relating to OZ magazine, the OZ obscenity trial and Dennis' other projects including 'cOZmic Comics' and part of his personal library relating to OZ and counterculture. The first three series relate to the production and running of the magazine and include correspondence, articles ...

  4. Felix Dennis OZ Magazine Archive THM/497. Editorial Files THM/497/1. Editorial Correspondence THM/497/2. ... Felix Dennis Personal Material 1974 – 2014 THM/497/8.

  5. Years later, Felix Dennis told author Jonathon Green that on the night before the appeal was heard, the Oz editors were taken to a secret meeting with the Chief Justice, Lord Widgery, who reportedly said that Argyle had made a "fat mess" of the trial, and informed them that they would be acquitted, but insisted that they had to agree to give up ...

  6. Felix Dennis (1947-2014), magazine publisher and poet, was born in Kingston upon Thames, Surrey. Dennis began his career as a publisher in 1974, when he published the niche magazine Kung-Fu Monthly. Four years later, however, he shifted his attention to computer magazines by purchasing Personal Computer World: a change that would make his fortune.

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  8. Jun 19, 2017 · Felix Dennis was co-editor of the underground magazine published between 1967 and 1973, which sought to challenge the establishment and encapsulated the spirit of 1960s and '70s counter-culture. His archive not only recounts Oz’s kaleidoscopic history across its 48 issues but chronicles one of the most politically and socially revolutionary periods in world history.