Kenneth Joseph Kenafick (11 April 1904 – 26 January 1982), also known by the pen namesJames Kennedy and Leo Conon, was an Australian poet, writer, translator and anti-conscription campaigner.
He was the secretary of the No Conscription Campaign and the organisation's successor, League for Freedom. He was the editor of the Anti-Militarist News and Review journal.
After his education, Kenafick worked as a teacher in high schools throughout Victoria.[2] Three volumes of his poetry, written under the pseudonym James Kennedy, were published by Thomas Lothian from 1935 to 1939.[2] In 1957, he published an autobiography under the pen name Leo Conon.[1]
He was a member of the Victorian Teachers' Union and the Australian Labor Party, although he broke away from the party in support of Maurice Blackburn in 1942, becoming secretary of the No Conscription Campaign from 1943 to 1946.[2] He was known for his anarcho-socialism[3] and as a pacifist.[1] His 1948 work, Michael Bakunin and Karl Marx, is considered a good account of the Marx/Bakunin debate.[4] He was Secretary of the No Conscription Campaign and the organization's successor, the League for Freedom, for many years.[2] After the organisation was renamed the League for Freedom and World Friendship,[2] Kenafick became the editor of the journal it published in Melbourne: Anti-Militarist News and Review.[5]
In 1950, he edited and translated an anthology of Mikhail Bakunin's work entitled Marxism, Freedom and the State, published by Freedom Press in London, UK, which is widely cited.[6][7][8][9]