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Byron Writers Festival

Arts & Culture Podcasts

Byron Writers Festival is a not-for-profit, member-based organisation offering a year-round program of workshops, seminars and events for writers and readers. Our annual festival, held in August, is the largest regional Writers Festival in Australia.

Location:

United States

Description:

Byron Writers Festival is a not-for-profit, member-based organisation offering a year-round program of workshops, seminars and events for writers and readers. Our annual festival, held in August, is the largest regional Writers Festival in Australia.

Language:

English


Episodes
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What If Everything We Imagine Comes True

5/5/2024
Speculating about the future, interrogating the past and understanding through storytelling unite three writers. A historian and two novelists describe how their approaches to writing allow them to imagine – and reimagine – past, present and future. Michelle Arrow, Grace Chan, Shankari Chandran with Phillipa McGuinness.

Duration:01:00:05

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The Family Spark

5/5/2024
Stories are passed down through the generations. Expectations are too. Three novelists whose writings reflect their diverse family backgrounds share how the stories they inherited inform their writing. Shankari Chandran, Shirley Le, Peter Polites with Jemma Birrell.

Duration:01:02:34

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Green Imaginings

5/5/2024
The science has long been there, but it will take imagination to win the world over to climate action. Two authors who have reimagined songs and witchy tales discuss how fiction can spark the energy we need. Eliza Henry-Jones, Mark Smith with Nell Schofield.

Duration:00:56:26

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Checking Out

5/5/2024
Silent quitting, climate quitting, goblin mode, human sustainability, leaning out. What are all these terms and what age are we living in? How is language evolving to describe how we live now and what do all those catch-phrases mean? Ellen van Neerven, Alison Pennington, Kristine Ziwica and Paul Barclay.

Duration:01:00:03

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The Book Of Roads And Kingdoms

3/31/2024
One of Australia’s best-loved broadcasters, Richard Fidler takes us into the world of medieval wanderers who wrote of their travels to the edges of the known world during Islam's fabled Golden Age. In conversation with Kári Gíslason.

Duration:01:03:17

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Nothing Bad Ever Happens Here

3/31/2024
Nothing Bad Ever Happens Here is a luminous, compelling and utterly surprising memoir by Heather Rose, the bestselling author of Stella Prize-winner The Museum of Modern Love and Bruny. Heartbreaking and beautiful, this is a love story brimming with courage and joy against all odds, one that will bring wonder, light and comfort to all who read it. Heather Rose in conversation with Jill Eddington.

Duration:00:58:37

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Cult Trip

3/31/2024
Investigative journalist, Anke Richter, discusses how she immersed herself in the wild world of cults around the globe, exposing the ways they attract, entrap and destroy otherwise ordinary people. Anke Richter in conversation with Zacharey Jane.

Duration:01:01:43

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All The Living And The Dead

3/31/2024
We are surrounded by death in news, true-crime podcasts and even nursery rhymes. Yet from an early age, we are told that death is to be feared. How can we know what we're so afraid of, if we don’t examine it? Hayley Campbell in conversation with Kerry Sunderland.

Duration:01:00:11

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Myth And Folklore in Literature

3/4/2024
From the dangers of inherited magical powers, to haunted North Sea islands where witches were once hunted to a Danish fairytale about a woman swallowed by the sea, novelists Sarah Armstrong, Eliza Henry-Jones and Holly Ringland tell Kári Gíslason how old tales become new in their fiction.

Duration:00:58:15

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Living Disgracefully

3/4/2024
Older women know that our society, smitten with youthfulness, devalues them in ways that can diminish their self-worth. In this episode Susan Johnson, Jacinta Parsons and Tracey Spicer discuss ways to reclaim pride in one’s ageing self – including by living disgracefully.

Duration:01:00:56

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Black Joy

3/4/2024
With our social media feeds constantly inundating us with images of trauma, Black Joy is an expression of resistance and healing. Storytellers Maxine Beneba Clarke, Bebe Backhouse and Nakkiah Lui discuss with poet Cheryl Leavy what Black Joy means to them.

Duration:01:02:27

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Myth And Folklore in Literature

3/4/2024
From the dangers of inherited magical powers, to haunted North Sea islands where witches were once hunted to a Danish fairytale about a woman swallowed by the sea, novelists Sarah Armstrong, Eliza Henry-Jones and Holly Ringland tell Kári Gíslason how old tales become new in their fiction.

Duration:00:58:15

Ask host to enable sharing for playback control

Living Disgracefully

3/4/2024
Older women know that our society, smitten with youthfulness, devalues them in ways that can diminish their self-worth. In this episode Susan Johnson, Jacinta Parsons and Tracey Spicer discuss ways to reclaim pride in one’s ageing self – including by living disgracefully.

Duration:01:00:56

Ask host to enable sharing for playback control

Black Joy

3/4/2024
With our social media feeds constantly inundating us with images of trauma, Black Joy is an expression of resistance and healing. Storytellers Maxine Beneba Clarke, Bebe Backhouse and Nakkiah Lui discuss with poet Cheryl Leavy what Black Joy means to them.

Duration:01:02:27

Ask host to enable sharing for playback control

Myth And Folklore in Literature

3/4/2024
From the dangers of inherited magical powers, to haunted North Sea islands where witches were once hunted to a Danish fairytale about a woman swallowed by the sea, novelists Sarah Armstrong, Eliza Henry-Jones and Holly Ringland tell Kári Gíslason how old tales become new in their fiction.

Duration:00:58:15

Ask host to enable sharing for playback control

Living Disgracefully

3/4/2024
Older women know that our society, smitten with youthfulness, devalues them in ways that can diminish their self-worth. In this episode Susan Johnson, Jacinta Parsons and Tracey Spicer discuss ways to reclaim pride in one’s ageing self – including by living disgracefully.

Duration:01:00:56

Ask host to enable sharing for playback control

Black Joy

3/4/2024
With our social media feeds constantly inundating us with images of trauma, Black Joy is an expression of resistance and healing. Storytellers Maxine Beneba Clarke, Bebe Backhouse and Nakkiah Lui discuss with poet Cheryl Leavy what Black Joy means to them.

Duration:01:02:27

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The Mungo Panel

3/3/2024
Media is undergoing rapid change. Four journalists explore how that change can threaten democracy itself and how the Fourth Estate can retain its key tenets, safeguarding its role as the public’s watchdog.

Duration:00:55:34

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Misinformation

3/3/2024
Trustworthy news is essential to a healthy democracy but in 2023 misinformation is rife. Three panellists discuss with The Conversation Editor Misha Ketchell how and why misinformation and disinformation derail public debate and what we can do about it.

Duration:00:51:40

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Home, Elusive Home

3/3/2024
Our housing is in crisis. Ownership is out of reach for many, rents are through the roof and homelessness is on the rise. This panel explores the causes of the problem and possible pathways to a better future.

Duration:00:58:49