Category Archives: MWF info

On Afghanistan

By now, Malalai Joya should need no introduction. If you haven’t read the interview with her in the current edition of Overland, or the except of it in The Age last Monday; if you didn’t catch her on Q&A on Monday night or speaking to John Faine in the Conversation Hour, or even picked up a copy of her autobiography Raising My Voice, then I hope you were lucky enough to catch one of her sessions at the MWF.

On Saturday night, Joya addressed a packed BMW Edge, speaking frankly about life in Afghanistan today. 10 years of occupation has doubled the misery of the Afghan people, she claimed. The US-led invasion that was instigated as a response to the September 11, 2001 attacks on New York and Washington, and justified since with references to the dire situation for women and children (Afghanistan is the most dangerous place in the world to be a woman, according to UNIFEM) and the serious human rights abuses perpetrated by the Taliban, has not made things better for the Afghan people, Joya claimed. In fact, they have made them worse. If, in the time of Taliban rule, some women in Kabul were mildly better off, certainly nobody listens to their voices now. They are lashed in public, raped by corrupt police, shot. Women sell their babies for loose change because they cannot afford to feed them. Men are hung for being pro-democratic, and then their bodies are harvested for organs.

“Democracy never came from bombing a wedding party.”

Afghanistan has billions of dollars in mineral resources, Joya explained, that could be exploited for the benefit of the people. However, they also have the second most corrupt regime in the world, so the Afghan people don’t see any of the benefits from these resources. The money goes straight into the pockets of the already wealthy, powerful and ruling elite. In attempting to bring about democracy and bring down the Taliban, the NATO forces have, in Joya’s words, ‘propped up’ a regime of ‘criminal war lords’. These war lords only differ from the Taliban in their fiscal approach, not their anti-democratic or anti-humanitarian mentalities.

Joya does not deny that things are bad. After years of underground activism and persecution, she knows better than anyone that they are devastating. But the Afghan people are ‘out of the frying pan and into the fire’ now because foreign military forces are occupying the country. The people dropping bombs and killing civilians in air strikes are NATO forces. In fact, some of the worst massacres, she claimed, happened in Afghanistan after President Obama came into power. Nobody wants to believe that a superpower like the US would lend its support to these kinds of travesties, and yet 14 countries are allied with them over the war in Afghanistan. The lawlessness that exists because of their presence is their excuse to stay longer. They are currently scheduled to leave mid 2014, but they are now talking about setting up permanent military bases in the country. This is part of the reason why Joya believes they are not in Afghanistan to help the Afghan people but for their own strategic interests. ‘I do not believe it is a war on terror,’ Joya said, ‘simply war crime.’

The most striking thing about Joya’s speech – and the part of her message that I think is most crucial, and perhaps what is lost in the contemporary mainstream coverage about Australia’s presence in Afghanistan – is her focus on what the people of Afghanistan want. Neither the war lords currently in power nor the Taliban act in the interests of the people, she says. To assume that the Afghan people want these corrupt and violent war lords in power – and further, to assume that outside forces negotiating with them at gunpoint could possibly bring about democracy – is naïve, as though a population would choose to be exploited, to be tortured, to be oppressed. And yet by trying to work within the existing power structures, she claims, the NATO forces are actually uniting the enemies of the people against the people.

“Democracy without independence or justice is meaningless.”

Afghanistan needs honest helping hands, Joya said – they need schools and they need hospitals. But through the military occupation, the money and power falls into the pockets and hands of the corrupt. The media never reports the internal resistance, to not only the Taliban and the war lords, but to the NATO forces themselves. The question is always asked: ‘But what will happen if the troops leave?’ Except, Joya said, that nobody asks what is already happening while NATO forces occupy the country. Civil war in Afghanistan is not a possibility; it is an actuality. But if the foreign troops leave, she said, actually leave, the backbone of the corrupt regime will break. And then, finally, perhaps the people of Afghanistan will be able to liberate themselves.

Get political

Feel like a bit of grit in your Saturday?

Power Without Responsibility

Over the last 10 years, The Australian has become one of the most prominent conservative political campaigners in this country – so comfortable in this assumed role that in an editorial in September 2010, the paper announced that it believed the Greens ‘should be destroyed at the ballot box’. But what does it mean for a newspaper, which claims to uphold the ideals of fair and balanced reporting, to be such an overt political actor? And what effect does this have on the political debate in Australia? 

If you’re quick this morning you could get along to BMW Edge at 10am to see Robert Manne and Eric Beecher talk about Manne’s new Quarterly Essay: Bad News – Murdoch’s Australian and the Shaping of the Nation, examining The Australian’s political voice and it’s role in public debate. For those of you still coming down from the New News conference and Jay Rosen’s excellent keynote last week, this could be the perfect antidote.

Middle East – Spring or Fall?

The popular uprising in Egypt that began on January 25 toppled the regime of Hosni Mubarak. Soon Egypt will be holding its first elections post-uprisings. But how did the uprising come about? What did it mean for the people? What are the complications involved and how might it be seen in the context of the revolutions occurring all across the Middle East? Professor Amin Saikal, commentator Mona Eltahawy and narrative non-fiction writer Joseph Braude will be discussing with Louise Adler the history and the possibilities for the region, today at 2:30pm in BMW Edge.

Big Ideas: 10 Years After 9/11 – Pakistan, Afghanistan and the Struggle for Democracy

“They are wasting your taxpayers’ money and the blood of your soldiers.”

If you haven’t yet heard former Afghan parliamentarian Malalai Joya speak – if you missed her Monday night appearance on Q&A, or her appearance on the Conversation Hour with John Faine on Friday morning – here’s your chance. Joya’s uncompromising politics are underpinned by years of underground activism for women’s rights, a public fight against internal corruption in Afghanistan, foreign occupation and war. Defying death threats and surviving assassination attempts, Joya continues to speak out despite attempts to silence her, making her one of the strongest and clearest voices against the war. She is speaking tonight at BMW Edge at 6:30pm as part of the MWF’s Big Ideas program.

On uprising

Since December 2010, the Arab world has been in uprising. Beginning in Tunisia, one man’s act of self-immolation became the catalyst for a wave of political protests that spread throughout the Middle East and North Africa over the following months.

On January 25, 2011, the population of Egypt took to the streets, protesting police brutality and abuse of power, demanding the resignation of the Ministry of Interior and accountability from President Hosni Mubarak’s government. After 18 days of protests throughout the country, during which the Mubarak regime declared curfews, deployed the military and shut down internet access in attempts to cripple the escalating unrest, Mubarak himself finally resigned.

During the 18-day uprising, a journalist by the name of Mona Eltahawy started appearing on radio and television broadcasts across the United States, giving her perspective on the events unfolding in Cairo. A New York-based commentator, Eltahawy was born and raised in Egypt and moved to the United States in 2000. Her writing has appeared in the Washington Post, International Herald Tribune, Toronto Star, Israel’s The Jerusalem Report and Denmark’s Politiken among others, and she is a frequent guest on television and radio. Eltahawy speaks and writes frequently on Islam and feminism, and has attracted criticism for some of her politics, particularly her support for the Libyan intervention and the recent burqa ban in France. Her high profile during the Egyptian uprising led to feminist website Jezebel dubbing her ‘the woman explaining Egypt to the West’. Determined and uncompromising, Eltahawy is a compelling figure in the line-up of female political voices staking out their territory at the 2011 Melbourne Writers Festival.

Mona Eltahawy will be speaking at the MWF as part of the Big Ideas programme. She will be speaking on The Roots of the Egyptian Revolution: From Tahrir Square to Liberation from Dictatorship on September 2, and discussing the Arab Spring with Joseph Braude, Amin Saikal and Louise Adler on September 3. 

Five reasons why I love Julia Zemiro

 

1. She’s smart and funny in equal doses.

Evidence for smart? She told The Age earlier this year that if she was transport minister, she’d made public transport free for a year. “I know the system can be pretty poor but a year would be long enough for people to see some real benefits of walking and leaving the car at home.” If that’s not smart, I don’t know what is. Evidence for funny? She was a favourite on improvisation comedy program Thank God You’re Here, but she also manages to insert witty barbs into just about any interview or appearance.

2. She’s a natural at hosting and a terrific interviewer.

She makes the audience feel comfortable and at ease. It’s a rarer talent than you’d think, and you don’t generally notice it because it’s a bit like editing – it’s all about absence (of awkward pauses, imperfect segues, etc.) Talking to Sunday Life a few weeks ago about her job hosting the SBS documentary Sex, she said of interviewing: “I’ve done a lot of waitressing in my life and the whole point of waitressing – or hosting [TV shows], indeed – is to make people feel comfortable. It’s to let them know what the night’s going to be like, and what they can expect. And when you interview someone, it’s about saying hello, and making a connection.”

3. She’s half-French.

Who doesn’t love the French? (Apart from the English.) I could be imagining it, but there seems to be a certain French insouciance in some of her attitudes. On fashion: “There’s a difference between wearing a mini and a great pair of kinky boots and wearing a revolting mini and a pair of Ugg boots, where it’s, ‘Oh yeah, I can see your underwear.’” On pubic hair: “I remember the Joy of Sex book. I don’t wax, or ‘Brazilian’ or anything – I tidy, you know, but I don’t believe in doing the whole thing: a) because I don’t like pain, and b) because I don’t like how it looks. I feel like a child, and I’m a woman.” On SBS’s reputation for racy content: “I think it’s high time people grew up – in Europe, this wouldn’t even be an issue. In Australia what astounds me is, ‘Ohhh, there’s this TV station, SBS, where you can see boobies.’ It’s like – are you for real?” *

4. She’s a feisty, unafraid-to-be-herself, woman. (See above.)

She exudes real. (Yes, whatever that is.) As she told The Age, “Women of different ages often tell me they love what I’m doing and to not get skinny and weird.” I second that.

5. This is a bit shallow, but – she rocks a vintage frock, or a striped tee.

I would love to steal her Rockwiz wardrobe, especially.

 

If you love Julia Zemiro too, you’ll love MWF’s very own Friday Night Live late-night talk show, hosted by Julia herself. At BMW Edge, Federation Square, both Friday nights of the festival, 9-10.30pm. With house band The Bamboos.

Friday 26 August: Steve Hely (The Office, 30 Rock) , Jon Jon Goulian, Tess Gerritsen, Felicity Ward, Gareth Liddiard

Friday 2 September: Simone Felice, John Elder Robison, Rachel DeWoskin, Casey Bennetto, Leslie Cannold, Charlotte Smith

Melbourne Writers Festival program launches tomorrow

Yes, that’s right: the Melbourne Writers Festival program will be available in your copy of the Age tomorrow morning, or online at our website. You’ll be able to stop making your dream author wishlist and start compiling a real one.

The MWF team have been working tirelessly for months to put together a sublime 2011 program. Running for 11 days, the program boasts over 300 sessions and 400 guests, including some of the most exciting, most respected and most beloved writers the world has to offer.

If you feel like even a day is too long to wait, you can already check out our Schools Program online. Tickets for the 2011 Schools Program are already available; book in to see literary superstars ranging from acclaimed fiction writer Maile Meloy to local heroes Peter Goldsworthy and Steven Amsterdam taking residence in Federation Square haunts, ACMI cinemas, ArtPlay, the Wheeler Centre and the Immigration Museum.

We’re unbelievably excited – less than a month to go until our first events. You can expect some fabulous opportunities to eat with your favourite authors, discover literary Melbourne, and discuss the future of reading and writing. Whether you love fiction, journalism, poetry, graphic novels, crime, music … and more, or all the above, we think we’ve got you covered. And stay tuned for our Keynote Events: trust me, you’ll want to be there.

Knock-knock?

Hello. It looks like we’re the first people to stop by for a while.

My name is Stephanie. I’m new here. The Melbourne Writers Festival asked me to blog for them this year because Angela Meyer is packing her suitcases and zooming off on a trip to Europe. I know you’ll miss her terribly, but I reckon we can become friends.

You might have seen me around the traps – I tell stories at Ginger and Honey and sometimes on the Overland Literary Journal blog. I get pretty fired up when I care about something, so maybe you’ve seen me getting shouty and argumentative on Twitter. Or perhaps you’ve come across my creative writing? You can find some of it in harvestVoiceworks, and the Emerging Writers’ Festival Reader. I’m interested in literature and politics, music, philosophy and criticism, but I also really like birds, in the bushwalking, binoculars-wearing, Harry-high-pants-and-carrying-a-guidebook kind of way. (Please don’t judge me.)

At the moment, I’m writing a PhD on literary representations of Indigenous Australia and a novel to boot, so I’ve been reading a lot of Australian fiction lately: Gail Jones and Peter Carey, Xavier Herbert, Kim Scott and Alexis Wright. I’ve been at university for eight years. That seems like a lot, but I’ve also been regularly commandeering my Dad’s old Land Cruiser and running off with it to the Top End to hang out with my extended family and friends, chasing crocodiles, cane toads and the occasional unseasonal storm. So it’s not all bad.

Anyway, I’ll be making this place a regular hang-out. I think you should start coming around more often.

Magazine


No, we haven’t been smuggling illicit substances into the country stuffed inside cuddly toys and ‘antique’ furniture. In MWF’s tribute to season 2 of The Wire we have our very own shipping container down by the river. (Ah, season 2, what a bitter pill…)

Inside this imposing black behemoth you will find a cavalcade of free events programmed and hosted by the finest literary magazines and journals on these Antipodean shores. For those who popped their heads in last weekend, you would have borne witness to the delights provided by Overland, The Lifted Brow, Going Down Swinging and Kill Your Darlings. This weekend sees Meanjin, Ampersand, harvest and The Big Issue fronting up to stare you down.

The lineup: Meanjin (Sat 10am-130pm); Ampersand (Sat 130pm-5pm); harvest (Sun 10am-130pm); The Big Issue (Sun 130pm-5pm).

Now, what do they all have in store? I can and now will exclusively reveal a bit more than what’s in the program. Meanjin have Adrian Hyland giving us the lowdown on synaesthesia, as well as readings from Ruby Murray and Belinda Rule, and conversations betwixt eds Sophie Cunningham & Jessica Au and Ben O’Mara & Michael Harden. Bam!

Ampersand take the reins with ed Alice Gage introducing us to Bad Idea’s Dan Stacey & Alyssa McDonald, with guest spots from Miles O’Neil previewing his Fringe show and Gavin Pretor-Pinney starting a global society from his back room (or his container, in this case).

On Sunday harvest have readings from Emmett Stinson, Anjum Hasan & Jake Adelstein talking about the chapter that was cut from his book. Watch out for Poetry Fight Club too, with David Astle doing a Tyler Durden and trying to smackdown the pretenders (including, sadly, me ‘rapping’, oh dear).

The weekend comes to a close with The Big Issue trotting out the heavy hitters. China Mieville will play a huge game of exquisite corpse, Mic Looby talks columns, whilst Chris Womersley & Toni Jordan get into the nitty gritty of fiction.

Yes folks, all this is FREE. Get down to that container this weekend and be quick if you want a comfy seat. S’all in the game, yo.

Big Ideas


With so much going on during the festival, it’s hard to know where to start sometimes but every year I find myself getting to grips with it by looking at the major themes. What are the topics on everyone’s minds? What have we been thinking about this past year? What should we be talking about? With the country in the grip of election fever it’s easy to be hoodwinked into discussions about the undoubtedly important topics of how much will the winner spend on new wallpaper in the Lodge and just where does Julia get those sharp suits? But there are other, wider discussions to be had on topics that genuinely affect all of us. That’s where our Big Ideas series comes in.

It is serendipitous of course that we have former PM Bob Hawke kicking off this series at the beautiful Capitol Theatre (reason alone to attend one of these sessions if you’ve never been inside) talking about the machinations that go on in the corridors of power, the juicy behind-the-scenes stuff we all want to hear. Waleed Aly and another former PM Malcolm Fraser get to grips with what’s happening with the Liberal party on Sunday 29th in a mouthwatering session that is guaranteed to have a lot of resonance one week after the election result.

Homegrown politics aside, there are some really enticing sessions to get your teeth into on privacy, terrorism, copyright, journalism, poverty, indigenous rights & the Jewish establishment. On Sat 28th Peter Beinart gets to grips with the effects of Israel’s policies on young Jewish Americans, who he claims are abandoning their faith as a consequence. He’s followed on Sunday by economist and author Loretta Napoleoni (pictured above) who’s breaking down the links between finance and terrorism – with so much money being poured into wars in the Middle East, is the West bankrupting itself?

We take a break then until the second weekend and get stuck into new media. The world’s foremost expert on all matters digital, Cory Doctorow, brainstorms copyright and creativity in the digital world in what is shaping up to be one of the most exciting lectures we have this year, on Sep 2nd. Progressing directly on from that, the ABC’s Mark Scott opens the New News conference with his keynote address on the future for media outlets in this fast-morphing world. Incidentally, the two-day New News conference is worth checking out for a hundred other great reasons. This is simply definitive for anyone interested in a media career.

Friday 3rd sees a change of tack as Miles Franklin-winner and all round legend Frank Moorhouse looks through the keyhole at whether or not we deserve our privacy these days, in the Alan Missen Oration. As someone who is constantly de-tagging photos of myself on Facebook, I can relate. Later that night another legend, Noel Pearson, delivers the John Button oration in what will be an impassioned and informative speech on the need for an indigenous policy shift. Also, some lucky writer will receive 20 grand that night as the John Button Prize is handed out.

Which leaves one of the biggest questions for last – whose problem is poverty? This is part of a series in response to the United Nations DPI/NGO Annual Conference which is taking place in Melbourne and features World Vision CEO Tim Costello. This one goes deep into social and governmental responsibility to work out how we can come to grips with this ever-present and all too easily ignored issue.

Those are this year’s Big Ideas folks. At this late stage some of these may be tricky to get tickets for but if you can get your hands on some they’re well worth it, if only to take your mind off those redecorations up at the Lodge.

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Meant to be Spoken

Robert Reid at fortyfivedownstairs

Writing for the stage is often sadly neglected at writer’s festivals, but we’re so into it that we’re devoting our first Saturday night to a celebration of playwriting. Tashmadada are one of those rare theatre companies that revel in the spoken word and who manage to corral a staggering range of voices under their banner. Deborah Leiser-Moore is the brains behind it all, and you can catch her in conversation with playwright John Romeril at 4pm on Sat 28th, just 3 hours before the main event.

The Festival Club will come alive at 7pm that night with a pretty intimidating lineup of playwrights performing excerpts from their work. Louise Doughty, Stephen Sewell (Animal Kingdom, The Boys), Van Badham, Melissa Reeves, John Romeril (One Night the Moon), Ross Mueller, Peta Tait, Aidan Fennessy & Jane Harrison are all on the bill, with Robert Reid hosting. This is a really unique opportunity to hear these writers interpret their own scripts – how often would audiences get that chance? I reckon it’s a great idea and I’m honestly surprised no one’s thought of it before. Tashmadada have tapped into something special here and we’re just grateful to be able to present Meant to be Spoken at the festival, particularly given its success earlier this year during the Searchlight Festival at fortyfivedownstairs. Have a browse around the Tashmadada site and check out some videos to get a glimpse of what an exciting night this is going to be!

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Beowulf Sheehan

Hot shot New York photographer Beowulf Sheehan will be joining the festival to make special commemorative portraits for the 25th Anniversary of MWF. Beowulf has photographed writers from Salman Rushdie to Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie and we’re delighted he’ll be coming to give us an extra dash of glamour, and to capture some of our leading festival lights for posterity.

Beowulf is looking for an intern to assist him during his trip. The position is unpaid and will include lifting camera gear around, but it will also give an up and coming photographer an unprecedented opportunity to learn from a master craftsmen. See his stunning pictures here.

If you’d like to be considered for this please send your CV to Jacqui Bateman at admin@mwf.com.au before Monday 23rd August.

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