Posts in 2
Interview #223 — Helene Chung

“Being who I am, namely Australian Chinese and female—two distinct drawbacks in mid-20th-century Australia, especially in the small apple isle of Tasmania—I grew up totally outside the norm in white assimilationist Australia, when those with non-Anglo-Celtic backgrounds were expected to merge with the majority and forget their own cultural backgrounds.” 

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2, InterviewLeah McIntosh
Interview #220 — Kim Ho

“Working in telly, it’s astonishing how much writers’ rooms feel like the engine rooms of cultural production—whose stories we [decide to] tell determines whose humanity we value. I think the centrality of cis straight white characters in our major narratives facilitates a grave dearth of empathy in this colony.”

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2, InterviewLeah McIntosh
Interview #216 — Ghassan Hage

“Neoliberalism has generalised this tendency by accentuating the ideology of ‘new beginnings’, and thus the self-made social subject that goes hand in hand with it: someone with brilliant ideas that come to them as if from nowhere and who is always ready to initiate something original and ‘revolutionary’.”

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2, InterviewLeah McIntosh
Interview #212 — Tracey Lien

“The fact that my parents were refugees—who took enormous risks and sacrificed so much—made me feel as though I have no excuses. […] Given that I’ve had a relatively comfortable life, I should be willing to take risks. The least I can do is pursue the things that I want to pursue.”

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2, InterviewLeah McIntosh
Interview #205 — Shelley Parker-Chan

“There’s often pressure from publishing to tell a particular kind of Asian or immigrant story, but I wanted to show an ambivalence to the specific culture I came out of. In some respects I'm proud of it, and in others, it stifled who I actually was. How do we sit with that?”

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2, InterviewLeah McIntosh