Constance Winifred Frazer (18 September 1925 – 6 May 2002) was an Australian poet, feminist, revolutionist and writer.
She became active in the Anti-War Movement during the Vietnam War, prompted by concern about her son being conscripted. She also founded Women Against Nuclear Energy (WANE) in 1980.
Frazer was strongly affiliated with the Adelaide-based Friendly Street Poets, a poetry reading group and publisher based in Adelaide, South Australia. Australia's longest running open-mic poetry reading community, Friendly Street Poets was inaugurated as a fortnightly poetry reading on 11 November 1975, organised by Andrew Taylor, Richard Tipping and Ian Reid. Frazer's poems were published in 23 of the 26 readers of the Friendly Street Poet anthologies up until 2001, as well as in journals, newspapers, and magazines.
Frazer has read on ABC Radio and Radio Adelaide, as well as broadcasting poems on "Women Poets in Adelaide" in 1978. She participated in a poetry performance at the Unley Town Hall in 1987, organised by Tantrum Press and called The Company of Women. Two of her poems, 'Mirrors, and 'Death of a goddess' were performed at the Flinders University Drama Centre in 1996 in a piece called Mirrors: a performance anthology of SA women's poetry.
Frazer was a founding sponsor of and contributor to the Green Left Weekly alternative newspaper and she was an active member of the Democratic Socialist Party.
She published two poetry collections with Friendly Street Poets: Other Ways of Looking (1988) and Earthdweller, and co-edited Friendly Street Poetry reader no. 13 with Barry Westburg in 1989. There is also a spoken text published about Connie's life, entitled Ugly as a Boxer's Glove, which is spoken by Connie and edited by Marg McHugh.
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