Category Archives: MWF 2011 Podcasts
MWF 2011 Podcast: Switching to Fiction
Join four lauded non-fiction writers who have turned to fiction: Anna Funder (Stasiland) returns to 20th century Germany for All That I Am; Leslie Cannold (What, No Baby?) who further examines feminist questions in The Book of Rachael, Christopher Kremmer (The Carpet Wars) turns to sin and iniquity in The Chase; and journalist Malcolm Knox turns to the surf in The Life. Geordie Williamson asks, how do their fiction and non-fiction approaches differ?
MWF 2011 Podcast: The 22nd Century Bookshop
if:book’s Kate Eltham will introduce her vision of bookselling’s future, and speculate what new technologies might mean for bookshops after the regulatory and formatting dust has settled. Featuring Books for Cooks’ Tim White, Don Grover, CEO of Dymocks Booksellers, and chaired by the ABA’s Joel Becker.
Supported by the Australian Booksellers Association
MWF 2011 Podcast: Why I Read
Authors Kate Grenville, Tess Gerritsen and Chris Womersley discuss the books they read as children and teenagers that gave them a love of reading, in an event about the power of literacy to transform lives. With Antoni Jach.
Proudly supported by The Smith Family
MWF 2011 Podcast: The Pity of War – Afghanistan and Iraq
Former Afghan politician Malalai Joya, one of Time’s 100 Most Influential People in the World 2010, respected journalists John Martinkus and Karen Middleton, and Overland editor Jeff Sparrow discuss conflict and occupation in Afghanistan and Iraq, and the consequences of two wars that never seem to end.
MWF 2011 Podcast: Why the West Rules…For Now
Multi-award-winning writer and presenter Ian Morris has published several books on history and archaeology. Over lunch he talked about his latest book, Why the West Rules…For Now, explaining how the west came to dominate – and what will happen next.
MWF 2011 Podcast: Population Control?
The world’s population will reach seven billion in late 2011. Is a Big Australia coming? If so, why, how and is growth a good thing? Trend forecaster Bernard Salt (The Big Tilt), Katharine Betts (People and Place) and George Megalogenis (The Australian) talk to Sally Warhaft about generational change, immigration and planning for a soaring population.
Proudly supported by Monash University
MWF 2011 Podcast: New News Keynote – Jay Rosen
Jay Rosen has taught journalism at New York University and written about the media for nearly every major US publication, whether print or online. Here, he discusses the current state of political journalism in the US and in Australia, which he believes shares many of its ills. He argues that its problems tell a wider story: that of an impoverished notion of politics at the very centre of the practice of journalism. Offering solutions for the future, he argues that a better knowledge of and respect for politics could change everything.
This is the keynote address of New News 2011 presented by MWF and the Public Interest Journalism Foundation at Swinburne University of Technology
MWF 2011 Podcast: Life Stories in the Age of Terror
Whether profiling prominent figures or exploring the lives of those swept up by political and cultural change, biography and investigative journalism play an essential role in explaining global events. With a particular eye on the ‘war on terror’, Julianne Schultz chairs a Griffith REVIEW session with Assange biographer Andrew Fowler, Best Australian Profiles editor Matthew Ricketson and essayist Shakira Hussein.
Proudly supported by Griffith REVIEW
MWF 2011 Podcast: Lady Killers
Three doyennes of crime writing share the stage. Join Crime Writing Hall of Fame (UK) member Lynda La Plante (Blood Line), evergreen Kerry Greenwood (Heavenly Pleasures) and the always popular Jane Clifton to talk about the thrill of the genre, their latest books, and their favourite way to dispatch a villain. With Sue Green.
MWF 2011 Podcast: John Button Oration/The Fire Within – Michael Kirby
The 2011 John Button Oration will be delivered by former High Court Justice, the Honourable Michael Kirby, who has been described as ‘a judicial activist with firm moral convictions’ and ‘the great dissenter’. Kirby served on the High Court of Australia for 13 years. In his oration, The Fire Within, he’ll reflect on values, purpose and leadership. Prior to the oration the $20,000 John Button Prize will be awarded to the best piece of thinking and writing on the subject of public policy.
Proudly supported by the Philip and Vivien Brass Charitable Foundation









