POPULARITY
Acknowledgement// News Headlines// Sue Anne Hunter - Yoorook Justice Commission//First up, we'll hear a replay from our Dec interview with Sue-Anne Hunter who is a proud Wurundjeri and Ngurai (Nu-Ray) Illum Wurrung woman and Deputy Chair and Commissioner with the Yoorrook Justice Commission. Sue-Anne is a child and family services practitioner who has focused her career around using culture as a foundation for healing trauma and addressing the impacts of colonisation. We spoke about the The Yoorrook Justice Commission's recent investigation into the impact of the child protection and criminal justice systems on First Peoples in ''Victoria''. You can watch the public hearings that occurred from 5-16 December on the Yoorrok website. We know that this content can be distressing, so if you need someone to talk to, please contact 13YARN (13 92 76) to talk with an Aboriginal or Torres Strait Islander Crisis Supporter, available 24/7.// Victorian Aboriginal Legal Service (VALS) Invasion Day Webinar//On Tuesday the 23rd of January, the Victorian Aboriginal Legal Service VALS hosted a panel discussion about the child protection and youth justice systems, reversing colonisation, and ending Aboriginal deaths in custody. This is an edited excerpt of the discussion, hosted by VALS CEO Nerita Waight and featuring panelists Sissy Austin, Nayuka Gorrie and Tyson Lovett-Murray. Listen back to the full conversation and donate to support VALS' vital work for the Victorian Aboriginal community by heading to vals.org.au// Fitzroy Crossing Flood Update (Two Parts)//Earlier this week, Natalie Davey from community radio station Wangki Radio in Fitzroy Crossing, joined 3CR's Emma Hart to speak about the impact of the recent flooding in the Kimberley. This is part one of their conversation. Donate to support community led recovery by visiting https://mwrc.com.au/pages/donations http://www.wangki.org.au/ // Take a look at our Invasion Day 2023 show and Pay The Rent Songs//Hell No - Flewnt//This is Australia - Marrugeku//
Content Note: some of these excerpts contain mention of trauma, impacts of racist and colonial violence, and conversations on mental health challenges. Today on the show we're tracing the long lines of conversations we've had with First Nations guests over the last little while, to amplify the plurality of their stories. You'll hear from a compilation of First Nations voices speaking to their experiences to go beyond any homogeneous and typical storytelling including Tasman Keith, Nayuka Gorrie, Nessa Turnball-Roberts, Dr Sandy O'Sullivan, Jazz Money and our very own Sara Khan. You're hearing from (in order): Episode 79: No Country (with Tasman Keith) Episode 17: Anger is Love (with Nayuka Gorrie) Episode 45: Just Us (with Nessa Turnbull-Roberts) Episode 94: Nothing About Us Without Us (with Jazz Money and May Jeong) Episode 101: Beyond the Binary (with Sandy O'Sullivan) See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
MQFF help pinkwash apartheid, Dani Laidley returns as a hero, and the Victorian Pride Lobby release a massive report on LGBTIQA+ people's feelings toward police. Pinkwashing The Melbourne Queer Film Festival were asked to drop a pink-washing Israli film, and join in BDS against the aparthied state. They didn't, saying they wanted to remain “apolitical”. The push to remove the film was spearheaded by Queer Palestinians like Lujayn Hourani. MQFF co-president Molly Whelan and board member Nayuka Gorrie have resigned over the festival's decision. Returning hero Former North Melbourne coach Dani Laidley returned to speak at the football club, representing her “old tribe and new tribe”. Dani was outed as trans by police, who leaked photos and made transphobic comments. Pride lobby The Victorian Pride lobby surveyed 1,500 LGBTIQA+ people to understand their feelings towards police. In 2019, police raided queer bookshop Hares & Hyenas, breaking a man's arm (they also had the wrong address). IBAC found it was okay though. Get cops out of pride.
On Let's Talk Boe Spearim speaks with freelance writer Nayuka … Continued
Griffith Review Episode 2: Ashley Hay on Griffith Review 73: Hey, Utopia! Ashley discusses the power of imagination to transform the world we live in - through art, a reckoning with Australia's colonial history, a meaningful response to climate change and a different approach to eradicating poverty - just to name a few ideas ...featuring talented writers such as Ellen Van Neerven, Nayuka Gorrie, Fiona Foley, Sarah Sentilles, Jane Gleeson-White, Hugh Possingham, Sally Breen and many, many more. SHOW NOTES: Nicole Abadee Website: https://www.nicoleabadee.com.au Facebook: @booksbooksbookspodcast and @nicole.abadee Twitter: @NicoleAbadee Instagram: @nicoleabadee Griffith Review Website: https://www.griffithreview.com Facebook: @griffithreview Twitter: @GriffithReview Instagram: @griffithreview See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
The doin time show broadcasteda special event featuring artists who all have lived experiences of incarceration — sharing theirdreams of abolitionist futures and how we might get there. This Late Night Literature: Imagining Abolitionist Futures event took place on Thursday 24 June and featured stories submitted by women currently in prison, read out by the hosts on their behalf.Hosted by Nayuka Gorrie and Witt Gorrie as part of the Emerging Writers Festival 2021.The evening of storytelling featured Flick Smith, Tabitha Lean, Rosalina Curtis, Ashleigh and Stacey. Nayuka Gorrie introduces the event.Hosted by Nayuka Gorrie and Witt Gorrie as part of the Emerging Writers Festival 2021.Featuring the voices and work of Flick Smith, Tabitha Lean, Rosalina Curtis, Ashleigh and Stacey. You can watch the event on YOUTUBE — just search emergingwritersfestival.org.au and Late night Literature Abolitionist Futures.
Literature has played a significant role in the colonial imagination and the domination of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people. Bundjalung author and Miles Franklin Award winner Melissa Lucashenko (Too Much Lip) and Yuwaalaraay musician and author Nardi Simpson (Song of the Crocodile) have a profound discussion on writing Country with Festival Guest Curator, Gunai/Kurnai, Gunditjmara, Wiradjuri and Yorta Yorta writer, Nayuka Gorrie. As Nayuka reflects, “The way our land and non-human kin have been written formed part of the justification for the control and brutalisation of Country. This is in stark contrast to the way Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people write of Country. No one writes Country like we do.” See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Queerstories 2020 is a special series of the Queerstories podcast recorded during the lockdown months of 2020, featuring LGBTQI+ storytellers reflecting on the events of the year. These stories are about queer, blak family, both in the general sense and also in a very specific sense; they’re about one particular queer and blak family. Enoch Mailangi is a TV writer and text-based artist based in Lakemba. They are a 2020 Sydney Theatre Company Emerging Playwright, a 2020 Urban Theatre Project Resident Artist, and an MFA student at NIDA. Nayuka Gorrie is a Kurnai/Gunai, Gunditjmara, Wiradjuri and Yorta Yorta freelance writer who’s been published widely. They were a Wheeler Centre Next Chapter recipient in 2018 and they’ve written for TV, including Black Comedy, Get Krackin! and The Heights. Witt Gorrie is a white trans social worker who has worked alongside communities impacted by criminalisation for the past decade. They are currently based at Flat Out supporting survivors of family violence who have experienced criminalisation, duty failures and violence from police. They also provide outreach support to trans and gender diverse people incarcerated across Victorian prisons. Their writing on abolition has been published by the Guardian. Queerstories is an LGBTQI+ storytelling night programmed by Maeve Marsden, with regular events around Australia. For Queerstories event dates, follow Queerstories on Facebook. The Queerstories book is published by Hachette Australia, and can be purchased from your favourite independent bookseller or on Booktopia. To support Queerstories, become a patron at www.patreon.com/ladysingsitbetter And for gay stuff and insomnia rants follow me - Maeve Marsden - on Twitter and Instagram. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Acknowledgement of country// 7:05 am Intro and current affirs with Genevieve, Zoya and Madison // 7.15 am Zoya interviews Ruth Katerelos from Queerspace, for their regular chat about Queerspace and how the support the Queer community, and what Queerspace is doing to adapt to pandemic times // 7.35 am Lauren talks to Sarah Hill, Young Women’s Development Manager at the YWCA about their new web series titled 'Reflect. Grow. Thrive’. The series will run in the week leading up to International Day of the Girl (11 October), and features notable guest speakers including Nayuka Gorrie, Carly Findlay, Manal Younus, Amy Thunig, Elizabeth Wright, Rae Cooper, Lucille Cutting and Nkechi Anele // 7:45 am Madison speaks to Amy Mcguire about Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islanders representation in the media. Amy is a a Darumbal and South Sea Islander woman from Rockhampton in central Queensland. She is currently completing a PhD at the University of Queensland into media representations of violence against Aboriginal women. She is also a freelance writer and journalist. // 8.10 am We hear Track 3: Labour in Vain in the 'Undefoot' series. Underfoot is a series of virtual audio tours by Liz Crash and Jinghua Qian uncovering the secret histories of Footscray. Two old friends, both long-time Footscray residents, bring an intimate lens to local history as we travel through the archives looking for people like us: queers, migrants, radicals and artists. Track 3: chats about settler nativism, anti-Chinese campaigns, arts and gentrification, and the grotesque fantasy of a white Australia // SONGS:Nao (feat Lianne La Havas) - WomanMahalia (feat Ella Fai)- What You DidSZA - Supermodel
Sometimes imagining a little murder is the only way Nayuka can get through the day. Nayuka Gorrie is a Kurnai/Gunai, Gunditjmara, Wiradjuri and Yorta Yorta writer who's been published by The Guardian Australia, NITV, Junkee, the Saturday Paper, the Lifted Brow, Kill Your Darlings and Archer Magazine. They were a Wheeler Centre Next Chapter recipient in 2018, and they've written for TV including Black Comedy, Get Krackin! and The Heights. Queerstories is an LGBTQI+ storytelling night programmed by Maeve Marsden, with regular events around Australia. For Queerstories event dates, visit www.maevemarsden.com, and follow Queerstories on Facebook. The Queerstories book is published by Hachette Australia, and can be purchased from your favourite independent bookseller or on Booktopia. To support Queerstories, become a patron at www.patreon.com/ladysingsitbetter And for gay stuff and insomnia rants follow me - Maeve Marsden - on Twitter and Instagram.
"I see him as a navigator, not as a hero." In the first episode of our Letters to Cook miniseries, Rhoda Roberts introduces the Indigenous World Art Orchestra, a new First Nations gaze at Cook's journey told through fine music and first instruments. Participating artists Lisa Reihana and Nayuka Gorrie read their two searing Letters, and chat with Rhoda about language, land, white mythmaking, the scar of colonialism and their experiences as First Nations women.
When did you realise there is power in your race? For more than half the year, we've been asking each guest that comes on Race Matters that very question. So we thought we'd run through a few of them. In this episode, you'll hear from Bhenji Ra, Nayuka Gorrie, Abdul Abdullah, Benjamin Law, Min Jin Lee, Glenny Thomas, Lena Nahlous, Rainbow Chan, Damian Griffis, Ying-Di Yin, Justin Tam, Vicki Van Hout, Joel Bray, Candy Bowers, Aanisa Vylet, Soo-min Shim, Felicia Foxx and Jordy Shea. From the bottom of our hearts, thank you to all of our guests this year for their stories, wisdom, humour and vulnerability. And thank YOU for listening. Here's to big things in 2020! x
Michelle Law, Nayuka Gorrie, Raquel Willis, Ariel Levy and Curtis Sittenfeld at Broadside — Photo: Hannah Koelmeyer When we're described as ‘speaking out', what people really mean is we're ‘speaking out of turn' – and that we do not have the authority to do so. Behaving well means accepting things as they are, and sticking your neck out if you're not a white guy requires the knowledge that you may be seen as difficult, and unlikeable. Many of us have to actively work at claiming the right to occupy space, jobs, or make noise that others simply take as their entitlement. Opposition and rebellion is necessary and invigorating, but bending the world until it breaks can come at a great personal cost, which is divided unevenly amongst us. So how do we blaze a trail without losing our own way? Hosted by Michelle Law as part of Broadside 2019, Nayuka Gorrie, Raquel Willis, Ariel Levy and Curtis Sittenfeld discuss their voices and how their experiences have shaped their paths.Support the Wheeler Centre: https://www.wheelercentre.com/support-us/donateSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
First, no justice, no peace: we briefly mention the Warlpiri people's struggle for justice after NT death in custody of a 19 year old man.Then we hear from the #JusticeForMhelody Polan Bruno vigil, remembering her name as a trans Filipina woman of colour, after being murdered by a man, and the broader struggles. We hear from Laura McClean, Alexia from Migrante Australia, Sharmane from Anakbayan Melbourne, Ness from Gabriela Australia, Rabi from Philippines Australia Solidarity Association - PASA, and Yani + Sophie from AntiColonial Asian Alliance. To support her family, donate to the PayPal, with a note that says 'Justice for Mhelody'.We play Papaphilia's, Endless copies distributed and distorted from their origin, from Peace Was Never An Option (Launch).We are joined by Marian, an organiser with Blockade IMARC fighting for climate justice, who talks about the blockade, tensions and systemic problems with the police. We briefly hear audio from the blockade that connects the two struggles: Justice for Tanya Day, and Djab wurrung sacred landscapes.Ending on upcoming events: Prisoner Letter Writing, Visability- exhibition opening, Queerstories curated by Nayuka Gorrie and Hip Sista Hop recruiting.
How can we write gripping crime fiction that is socially aware of the realities of criminalisation and the complexities of the criminal justice system? Gala Vanting, Nayuka Gorrie and Queenie Bon Bon give us a chance to think critically about cultural and legal ideas of ‘the criminal’ and ‘the victim’. They discuss the effects of criminalisation and over-policing on politicised communities, and the importance of unpacking one’s own ideas about deviance, investigation, punishment and criminality as a writer of crime. --- Full artist bios here: https://2019.digitalwritersfestival.com/event/representing-criminalisation/ Download the transcript of the podcast here: https://2019.digitalwritersfestival.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/10/DWF19-EPISODE-ONE_REPRESENTING-CRIMINALISATION.docx Check out the full festival program here: https://2019.digitalwritersfestival.com/
A lineup of standout Festival guests respond to the 2019 Festival theme, Lie to Me. They explore the fibs, fictions and falsehoods that underpin our daily lives and personal relationships, and whether facts have any value in a post-truth age. Featuring playwright Patricia Cornelius, former Greens senator Scott Ludlam, political theorist Tim Soutphommasane, Oyinkan Braithwaite (whose debut novel My Sister the Serial Killer has just been longlisted for the Booker Prize), journalist and author Ece Temelkuran, social commentator and comedy writer Nayuka Gorrie, musician Megan Washington and much-loved compere Benjamin Law.
One can’t always rely on latenight furtive Googling to find out how to be a better lover. Nayuka Gorrie, Krissy Kneen, Fiona Patten and William Yang will reveal the books that set them on a path to a more pleasurable intimate life. Recorded live at Melbourne Writers Festival 2018.
Naarm-based writer and social commentator Nayuka Gorrie on the power of Blak women, self-care and the moment they realised their race was powerful.
Anupama Pilbrow, Nayuka Gorrie and Hella Ibrahim talk about the process of having your work edited and how much more difficult it can be when you’re an Aboriginal, Torres Strait Islander, POC and/or CALD writer, working with majority white institutions. We invite these exceptional writers and editors to discuss the editorial process, best approaches to being edited, and how we can build more sensitive and empowering protocols and institutions. If you like this episode of the Writes4Festivals podcast, check out all of our episodes at www.writes4women.com OR SUBSCRIBE (free and painless) at Apple Podcasts, Spotify, Stitcher or wherever you get your pods. #w4wpodcast #NYWF19 #Newcastle #Writing #Editing #Indigenous #PoC #WritingCommunity #publishing #journalism #festivals #podcasts SHOWNOTES: Writes4Festivalswww.writes4women.comFacebook - @Writes4FestivalsTwitter / Instagram - @w4wpodcast National Young Writers Festivalwww.youngwritersfestival.orgFacebook / Twitter - @NYWF Pamela Cookwww.pamelacook.com.auFacebook - @pamelacookauthorTwitter - @PamelaCookAU Kel ButlerFacebook / Twitter - @kelbutler Nayuka Gorrie Twitter - @NayukaGorrie Anupama PilbrowWeb - https://thesuburbanreview.com/author/anupama-pilbrow/Twitter - @Anupama_Pilbrow Hella Ibrahim Webhttps://djedpress.com/author/hella-ibrahim/ - Twitter - @djed_press
Co-writers and stars of ABC's irreverent Black Comedy, Nayuka Gorrie and Nakkiah Lui, discuss their experience of breaking into the world of television comedy writing as Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander women, sharing how they support each other along the way. Recorded live at Melbourne Writers Festival 2018.
Columnist, writer, and renowned raconteur Benjamin Law has assembled a conversational menu for his dream dinner party, with guests writer and activist Nayuka Gorrie, novelist Melissa Lucashenko, journalist David Marr and writer Nevo Zisin. Listen to them feast upon the topic ‘queers across generations’. Recorded live at Melbourne Writers Festival 2018, supported by the Star Observer.
7:00am Acknowledgement of Country7:10am We listen to an interview with Nayuka Gorrie, Kurnai/Gunai, Gunditjmara, Wiradjuri and Yorta Yorta freelance writer, about transformative justice, decolonisation and abolishing 'Australia Day' (first aired on the Transformative Justice Show, part of Satellite Skies). 7:45am We chat with Meriki Onus, Gunditjmara and Gunnai woman and co-founder of the Warriors of the Aboriginal Resistance (WAR), about 7 Days of Resistance, creativity and centring Indigenous sovereignty in abolition work. 8:05am: Neil Morris (DRMNGNOW) joins us in the studio to discuss his recently released (incredible!) track, Ancestors, Jan 26th and the question of how to #AbolishAustraliaDay if, after all, Australia Does Not Exist.Songs (The original broadcast on 855am and 3CR digital contained the following music - removed owing to no license for podcasting music)Kev Carmody: Pillars of SocietyDizzy Doolan: This Is How We Do RemixAncestress: Bring Buildings DownDRMNGNOW: Ancestors feat. Kee'ahn Prod. River BoySee you all this Saturday at the Invastion Day Dawn Service, BIRRARANGA (Melbourne) Invasion Day 2019 Protest and Balit Narrun Share the Spirit Festival
Nayuka Gorrie has moved back to Melbourne. They share a little of their vulnerability and reflect on the strong black women who help them deal with it. Nayuka Gorrie is a Kurnai/Gunai, Gunditjmara, Wiradjuri and Yorta Yorta freelance writer who has written for The Guardian, Junkee, Vice, SBS and others. They also write for TV, most notably for ABC TV’s Black Comedy. Queerstories is an LGBTQIA+ storytelling night programmed by Maeve Marsden, with regular events in Sydney, Melbourne and Brisbane. For Queerstories event dates, visit www.maevemarsden.com, and follow Queerstories on Facebook. The new Queerstories book is published by Hachette Australia, and can be purchased on Booktopia. To support Queerstories, become a patron at www.patreon.com/ladysingsitbetter And for gay stuff, insomnia rant and photos of my dog Frank follow me - Maeve Marsden - on Twitter and Instagram. See omnystudio.com/policies/listener for privacy information.
Where are the powerful voices speaking from a perspective of Bla(c)kness in the Australian podcast scene? This session brings together a panel of Aboriginal, African and Islander voices to critique podcast structures past and present, and explore how we might break through these to make space for underserved and underrepresented voices.Namila Benson (ABC) moderates this discussion with Angelina Hurley (Wild Black Women), Areej Nur (Broadwave) and writer Nayuka Gorrie. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
Nayuka's in love...but then her worst nightmare comes true. Nayuka Gorrie is a Kurnai/Gunai, Gunditjmara, Wiradjuri and Yorta Yorta freelance writer. Queerstories is an LGBTQI+ storytelling night programmed by Maeve Marsden, with regular events around Australia. For Queerstories event dates, visit www.maevemarsden.com, and follow Queerstories on Facebook. The Queerstories book is published by Hachette Australia, and can be purchased from your favourite independent bookseller or on Booktopia. To support Queerstories, become a patron at www.patreon.com/ladysingsitbetter And for gay stuff and insomnia rants follow me - Maeve Marsden - on Twitter and Instagram. See omnystudio.com/policies/listener for privacy information.
How are women, non-binary and gender diverse people represented in the media? What are the alternatives? Presented at MPavilion, this symposium explores feminist analyses and strategies in relation to the media, writing, new forms of publishing and text as form with guest speakers Brigid Delaney, Nayuka Gorrie, Natalie Thomas and Deb Verhoeven. This panel discussion launches ‘Unfinished Conversations’, a symposium series taking the form of collective discussions to unpack how feminism is critical and relevant today. * inclusive of non-binary and gender diverse people
Everyone needs a safe space from time to time. But finding it can be a struggle. Luckily, Nayuka Gorrie has found hers. Come along to the safe space of Nailed It at Giant Dwarf on September 28th to be part of our massive Sydney Fringe show. Tickets at GiantDwarf.com.au
When a lack of political voice leads to disempowerment, disengagement and disadvantage, personal voices speak up. Featuring Rebecca Lim, Jax Jacki Brown, Nayuka Gorrie and Karen Pickering.
This week we've got writer and Aboriginal activist Nayuka Gorrie in to break down 'jungle fever' for National Reconciliation Week - is there a cure? Emily & Julia talk pet names and progress on their latest dating experiment on Fiverr PLUS Zach & Brooke weigh in on appreciating the ladies. New podcast out weekly!
Nayuka Gorrie asks the audience to help her decide what was her lowest moment of 2016. Nayuka is a Kurnai/Gunai, Gunditjmara, Wiradjuri and Yorta Yorta freelance writer who has written for The Guardian, Junkee, Vice, SBS and others. She also writes for TV, most notably for ABC TV’s Black Comedy. Nayuka will be featured in the new Queerstories book which can be pre-ordered on Booktopia. Queerstories is an LGBTQIA+ storytelling night programmed by Maeve Marsden, with regular events in Sydney, Melbourne and Brisbane. For Queerstories event dates, visit www.maevemarsden.com, and follow Queerstories on Facebook. To support Queerstories, become a patron at www.patreon.com/ladysingsitbetter And for gay stuff, insomnia rant and photos of my dog Frank follow me - Maeve Marsden - on Twitter and Instagram. See omnystudio.com/policies/listener for privacy information.
The third leg of MRelay considered the theme 'Pause'. What happens when we stop—if we push a symbolic pause button on our lives? How is pause used as a diplomatic moment, a break in verse, a strategic instrument, a historical atonement or a connection to place? This session presented a chance to reflect on our past lives, imagined lives and future lives, and considered our environment and the surroundings we are in. How a moment of pause can result in a total reassessment and recalibration. In our technology-based society, we explored the significance of pause in creative practice, techniques of mindfulness, the importance of learning from history, paying respect to our elders and the unifying moment of a minute’s silence in a crowd. Pause was hosted by Nayuka Gorrie, Indigenous writer and activist. Speakers includedKenny Pittock, Melbourne based artist; Julie Bernhardt, professor at the Florey Institute of Neuroscience and Mental Health in Melbourne; Penny Modra, writing and grammar nerd at The Good Copy; Sue Maslin, hugely successful film producer; Daniel Teitelbaum, head of content at School of Life Australia; Amy Muir, director of MUIR Architects; and Eugenia Flynn, CEO at The Social Studio.
This week we feature a discussion of Aboriginal Sovereignty and the Treaty process that is currently underway in what is now known as Victoria. The forum was organised by the Moondani Balluk Academic Unit on Friday 4th November 2016. The talks explore concepts of First Peoples' Sovereignty, what a Treaty could look like and who has the right to negotiate it.Featuring: Lydia Thorpe, Robbie Thorpe, Nayuka Gorrie, Gary Murray.Links: www.treatyrepublic.net
Nayuka Gorrie returns to unpack Episode 2 of First Contact with me. It's bloody tough going as the episode looks at overcrowded housing and poverty in the NT town of Elliott and survivors of the Stolen Generation. What does the airing of this show actually mean for Indigenous Australians? Why do some react to the stories of the Stolen Generation with blatant denialism? How can non-Indigenous people (try to) be better allies? The World Keeps Happening is being filmed for Stan at the Comedy Theatre this Saturday December 3rd Watch Episode 2 on SBS On Demand here "It Throws Black People Under The Bus": Black Reactions to First Contact by Nayuka & Paul Gorrie First Contact: Poverty Porn And Trauma TV, With Bonus Celebrities by Amy McQuire First Contact interview: Ray Martin StolenGenerationsTestimonies.com A story on Richard Campbell's beautiful art is here Cause of the Week: Indigenous Literacy Foundation (indigenousliteracyfoundation.org.au)
Episode 1 of First Contact has arrived. The kind Nayuka Gorrie joined me for a viewing of the show and to share her thoughts. We discuss #DefineAboriginal, the difficulty in making a show like this and the issues and attitudes it exposes. Watch Episode 1 on SBS On Demand here Read my piece for Guardian Australia on the show here Hear my previous episode with Nayuka here @nayukagorrie Check out some discussion of the show from Indigenous voices on the NITV website here
Simon, Dan and Warren on the panel to talk about this week in computing and technology Lauren Rosewarne comes into the studio with her new book Intimacy on the Internet and all the implications that carries. The panel also has a discussion about "Blerd" culture with activist and public speaker Nayuka Gorrie
This week on Women on the Line we’ll be bringing you a sonically diverse show featuring excerpts from “Poetry and Noise,” an evening of contemporary performances presented by Molten Upset which took place at West Space on 30 June 2016. Molten Upset is the collaborative project of poet Autumn Royal and noise musician Lisa Lerkenfeldt, who co-curated the evening with the intention of generating spaces to explore the intersections of poetry and noise.Performers featured in this episode in order of appearance: Hana Earles reading poetry with electric violin by Natasha Rose Havir SmithDawn BloodLisa Lerkenfeldt Autumn RoyalSpike FPapaphiliaTarneen Onus-Williams and Nayuka Gorrie reading poems by Natalie Harkin
In Episode 1, Aamer Rahman talks political apathy, feminism, Recognise vs Treaty, and George Christensen's attempted turtle bribery with political pundit Heath Pickering, activist Nayuka Gorrie, and journalist Jarni Blakkarly. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
Nayuka Gorrie is a Kurnai/Gunai, Gunditjmara, Wiradjuri and Yorta Yorta woman who's passionate about progress for Indigenous Australians. After reading her piece for Vice entitled Fuck Your Constitutional Recognition, I Want A Treaty, I scurried into her (beautiful) bedroom (with her permission) to talk about the problematic nature of recognition, the echoing trauma of the Stolen Generation, white Australia's denialism, what an Indigenous treaty might look like and, of course, Andrew Bolt. The World Keeps Happening at the Sydney Comedy Festival for TWO NIGHTS ONLY My final blog for TheMusic.com.au, wrapping up MICF 2016 @nayukagorrie Nayuka on the Foundation for Young Australians Maddee Clarke on twitter - @intoreceiving Welcome to Country App Colouring The Rainbow Peopling The Empty Mirror Gregory Phillips: Should Australian Cities Bear Indigenous Language Names? Causes of the Week: Aboriginal Family Violence Prevention & Legal Service (fvpls.org, Sisters' Day Out), Seed Indigenous Youth Climate Network (seedmob.org.au)