New and compelling stories from Australia and around the world, told by some of our most popular and trusted historians. Step inside a time machine for an immersive journey through history, where stories of people, places and events bring the past vividly into our present world.
The medal that spoke
In 1805, Maori chief Te Pahi was gifted a silver medal by Sydney Governor Philip Gidley King. He had come from Aotearoa to establish trade.But the medal then disappeared.Two centuries later, Te Pahi's medal resurfaced – in a Sydney auction house
2/24/2024 • 28 minutes, 36 seconds
Crossing Enemy Lines
Minna Muhlen-Schulte knew her surname came from her German grandfather who’d married her Australian grandmother in the 1930s and had lived in Berlin. But she knew very little about her grandparents’ experience during World War Two, except that her grandfather fought on the ‘other’ side, with the German army. So Minna goes in search for her family’s wartime story.
2/17/2024 • 28 minutes, 36 seconds
The unspoken story of Isabel Pepper
Producer Fiona Pepper had always known her great grandmother died far too young, but until recently, she never knew the full story.
2/10/2024 • 28 minutes, 36 seconds
Secrets and Lies | My year behind the Iron Curtain
At the height of the Cold War a New Zealand teenager is sent to a hospital in the Soviet Union to grow new fingers on her left hand. Sounds like fiction? This actually happened to Miranda Jakich and she tells her tale on The History Listen.
2/3/2024 • 33 minutes, 44 seconds
Finding our father, Harry Valentine
Hidden family truths are discovered as two sisters follow the trail of their late fathers' secret life.
1/26/2024 • 28 minutes, 36 seconds
Green Mountain plane crash
It's the 19th February 1937, and a Stinson passenger plane leaves Brisbane for a routine flight to Sydney, but it never arrives. Instead, its disappearance sparks one of the most extensive air searches in Australia.
1/20/2024 • 28 minutes, 36 seconds
The Unknown Sailor - a wartime mystery
A lost ship, A lost sailor, a lost identity. In November 1941 as war drew closer to Australia. the HMAS Sydney and its crew of 645 sailors disappeared off the Western Australian coast after being ambushed by a German raider. Months later the body of a sailor washed up on tiny Christmas Island and was laid to rest by locals. Half a century on this unknown sailor would help unravel the mystery of how the pride of Australia’s navy just vanished.
1/12/2024 • 28 minutes, 40 seconds
The confidence men: conjuring up a wartime escape
What if the only tool you had to escape from a prisoner-of-war camp in WW1 was a homemade Ouija board? The story of a wild and elegant hoax concocted by two British soldier POWs to hoodwink their captors.
1/5/2024 • 28 minutes, 40 seconds
Tupaia - star navigator of the Pacific
In 1768 when James Cook sailed from Tahiti looking for the great southern land, Tupaia, a traditional Polynesia navigator was on board. His knowledge proved invaluable to Cook and his sailing skills astounded the crew. What role did Tupaia actually play in the voyage and why haven't we heard heard about him?
12/29/2023 • 28 minutes, 38 seconds
Retracing the sailors' walk
March 1797. Five British sailors and 12 Indian seamen are shipwrecked off the Gippsland coast in Victoria The closest settlement is the penal colony of Port Jackson, over 700 km north - the men have no choice but to walk to Sydney. Two centuries later, historian Mark McKenna and naturalist John Blay retrace the sailors' steps, to re-imagine the journey and the cultural encounters with the original inhabitants on this country. This is one of Australia's greatest survival stories and cross cultural encounters.Two centuries later, historian Mark McKenna and naturalist John Blay retrace the sailors' steps.
12/22/2023 • 28 minutes, 38 seconds
Last Light - the Valentich disappearance
A young pilot. A distress call. A missing plane. What happened to Frederick Valentich in October 1978?
12/19/2023 • 28 minutes, 40 seconds
Friedrich the Fraud
The story behind one of Australia's greatest con artists. In the late 1980s, when millions went missing from Victoria's National Safety Council, the man responsible, John Friedrich disappeared into thin air, and the media went wild.
12/8/2023 • 28 minutes, 36 seconds
Stories about radio - Listening to ghosts & Keep them guessing
Two stories about radio.In the past, radio was the most ephemeral of all media or art-forms. It's invisible, evanescent—it passes by the ear and is gone, yet radio can leave deep sound prints - memories of listening which can reverberate over decades.Plus, trying to unravel the secret behind one of the most popular radio shows of the 20th century, as a grandson tries to find out how his grandparents read people's minds. A story about magic,illusion and the creative power of radio.
12/1/2023 • 15 minutes, 42 seconds
Green Skin - Aboriginal Vietnam Veterans
Australia’s role in the Vietnam war has been portrayed in films, music and literature since the last troops left in 1972. But there’s a part of that story which has, until recently, gone unnoticed: the experience of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander men who fought in Vietnam. We hear the stories of two 20-year-old blokes who donned the ‘green skin’ and how it changed their lives forever.
11/24/2023 • 25 minutes
Ep 2: Ray Denning - the stitch up
With nothing to lose, Raymond Denning escapes Grafton prison in a rubbish bin. He has help from prisoner rights groups and an agenda to raise awareness about police corruption. The man-hunt for Denning turns farcical when he uses the media to make the police look foolish.
11/17/2023 • 34 minutes, 19 seconds
Ep 1: Ray Denning - breaking out
The story of one of Australia's most misunderstood criminals. After a traumatic childhood, Raymond Denning jumps from 'juvie' to jail. When an escape attempt goes wrong, a prison warder is critically injured and the finger is pointed at Denning.
11/10/2023 • 28 minutes, 36 seconds
Last letters - the wartime legacy of Lark Force unit
Port Moresby 1942, and the story of the most extraordinary postal delivery, when hundreds of letters from Australian POWs of the Japanese fell from the sky .
11/4/2023 • 28 minutes, 36 seconds
The Benalla Experiment - a camp for mothers and children
The little known story of migrant camp that was home to over 60,000 people - single mothers and their children - in the years after World War II.
10/29/2023 • 28 minutes, 36 seconds
Fairlight CMI - the instrument of musical change
This is the story of - and the soundtrack to - one of the most influential instruments of the last 50 years. Meet the creators of the Fairlight, the super stars that used it and learn the tricks of the music production trade along the way.
10/21/2023 • 31 minutes, 42 seconds
Asbestos — Dusted 03 | The human cost of mining in Australia
Asbestos was once known as the wonder mineral. It's now banned in Australia. But before that happened, companies kept making and selling asbestos products despite mounting evidence of its deadly dust.
Dusted, the human cost of mining in Australia is presented by Van Badham.
10/12/2023 • 28 minutes, 36 seconds
Dusted - the human cost of mining in Australia. Ep 2 Coal
When a vast coal seam was found running through the escarpment around Wollongong it seemed that this beautiful place had got lucky. But had it? Van Badham heads back to her hometown and goes ‘on the coal’ with the miners.
10/6/2023 • 28 minutes, 36 seconds
Dusted - the human cost of mining in Australia. Ep1 Gold
Gold may have made Australia rich, but historians are now digging up evidence of the devastating consequences of the silica dust that surfaced with it.
9/29/2023 • 28 minutes, 36 seconds
Ep 2: The Buried Tea Chests
Hidden for nearly a century, two chests of mail found under a Sydney home was declared to be one of the most important hauls in Australia’s postal history. Why the secrecy? And why has a Sydney family been so shocked by their revelations?
9/19/2023 • 28 minutes, 36 seconds
Ep 1: The Buried Tea Chests
When journalist Annika Blau learnt of the discovery of two tea chests of very valuable mail under the floorboards of an old Sydney home, she had little idea how it was connected to her. But the mail reveals both a shameful period of Australia's history, and family secrets that had been hidden for nearly a century.
9/15/2023 • 28 minutes, 35 seconds
The sands of Ooldea: part 4 Wankani
The story of how the traditional custodians of Ooldea got their sacred water soak back and the healing of the land.
9/8/2023 • 28 minutes, 36 seconds
The sands of Ooldea: Part 3 Mamu
North west of Ooldea in South Australia's Great Victoria Desert is Maralinga where the British exploded seven nuclear bombs. This episode explores the Cold War politics behind the bomb tests and their ongoing impact on the traditional owners of the land, the Maralinga Tjarutja people..
9/1/2023 • 32 minutes, 13 seconds
The sands of Ooldea: Part 2 Kabbarli
Ooldea's most famous resident was Daisy Bates, also known as "Kabbarli" or grandmother. She lived at Ooldea for sixteen years in a tent, helping to feed and clothe Aboriginal people, but these days her reputation is very mixed.
8/25/2023 • 42 minutes, 3 seconds
The sands of Ooldea: Part 1 Yuldi
On the edge of the Nullabor, Ooldea, with its ancient water soak "Yuldi Kapi", is one of the most important Aboriginal sites in Australia. Trading routes and dreaming stories crossed here for thousands of years, but then the transnational railway arrived in 1917.
8/18/2023 • 31 minutes, 35 seconds
One Tree: In Search of Stradivari's Sibling Violins
Producer David Schulman has been on a quest – he’s been trying to find a single tree. David’s a violinist. And for him, violins aren’t just boxes made of wood – they’re magical objects. With voices and spirits that can seem almost human. Old violins even work as a sort of ‘time machine’ – by the sound they make and by their stories, they carry us back into the past.And it turns out there’s solid science behind this method of time travel.
8/11/2023 • 28 minutes, 7 seconds
The Missing Magdalens
Magdalene Laundries for "fallen women" date back to 12th century Europe. These were Catholic run institutions to reform "wayward" women known as Magdalens, through strict religious observance and hard work..
8/8/2023 • 28 minutes, 36 seconds
A vapour of the mind: calling Sidney Jeffryes
The achievements of Sidney Jeffryes, a radio operator on the 1911 Australasian Antarctic Expedition, have been notably missing from the polar records. In an era that celebrated physical heroism, vulnerability was not tolerated.
8/1/2023 • 29 minutes, 39 seconds
Finding Fanny Finch
What if the most remarkable of all your ancestors was the one left off the family tree? Historian Kacey Sinclair and two of Fanny Finch’s direct descendants reconstruct and reflect on the life and legacy of a goldfields trailblazer, a woman of colour whose story was hidden for generations.
7/25/2023 • 28 minutes, 42 seconds
Invasion 1975 - the untold story of the Chinese-Timorese
Millie Skoko had never really thought much about her Mum’s side of the family, who are Chinese Timorese, and who came to live in Australia in the early 1970s. Until one day, when she was online, Millie discovered her Grandfather’s former home and building, Toko Lay, in stories about the Indonesian invasion of East Timor, in December 1975. This discovery leads Millie, in tandem with her mum Lorraine, on a quest to uncover the hidden history of the Chinese-Timorese community in Timor-Leste and hear from the survivors who experienced waves of violence at the hands of the invading forces.
7/14/2023 • 28 minutes, 36 seconds
Visions of the Filipina bride
Growing up in the 1990s, Alan Weedon always wondered why he was one of many kids born to an Australian father and Filipina mother. It was a pattern replicated in the various backyard barbecues and play dates of his youth — where Filipino men were far and few between.
Following the tragic death of his mother Jesusita in 2022, Alan, in his grief, decided to trace his Mum's story of coming to Australia. In doing so, he unravelled a great southern migration, where tens of thousands of Filipinas migrated to Australia via marriage in the 80s and 90s.
But when they landed in Australia, these Filipina brides — many of who had migrated on their own accord — were often subject to racist and sexist stereotypes. Most persistent was the 'mail order bride' tag, a stereotype that stuck and leached into newspapers and popular culture – and which still lingers on today.
7/10/2023 • 28 minutes, 36 seconds
Fanny Smith: Icon
In 1899, twenty-three years after her people were declared ‘extinct’, Fanny Smith made a revolutionary recording where she announced to the world that she was The Last Tasmanian. Far from ‘extinct’, she was a proud Aboriginal woman raising her eleven children and publicly singing and speaking her Pakana language. This is her extraordinary story.
7/4/2023 • 28 minutes, 36 seconds
Laya's Way Home Part 2
In 1945, Adolf Semler, a German World War One hero, was sent to a slave labour camp for refusing to denounce his Jewish wife Laya. In 2022, their great-grandchildren return to Germany to discover a town finally wrestling with the extent of its role in the Nazi regime.
6/23/2023 • 28 minutes, 36 seconds
Laya's Way Home Part 1
In 1945, Laya Semler became the last Jew sent to a concentration camp from Wennigsen, Germany. Her non-Jewish husband Adolf chose slave labour rather than abandon her. Theirs is a love story for the ages.
6/20/2023 • 28 minutes
Spies, lies and hairdryers
In the 1950s a romantic proposition by a Russian diplomat transformed Kay Marshall from an admin worker into one of Australia’s most important double agents. It was the beginning of a four-year intelligence operation which revealed that there was more going on at the Soviet Embassy than met the eye..
6/13/2023 • 28 minutes, 37 seconds
Through Samurai Eyes, ep 2
When amateur historian Nick Russell stumbled across a set of very old Japanese manuscripts, he unearthed a dramatic tale of convict mutineers, samurai warriors and a hijacked ship, which sheds new light on one of the greatest escape stories in Australian history.
6/6/2023 • 28 minutes, 38 seconds
Through Samurai eyes: one of Australia's greatest convict escape stories
A dramatic tale featuring pirates, Samurai warriors, a historical detective and a ship of escaped convicts from Australia who washed up in Japan in 1830
5/30/2023 • 28 minutes, 38 seconds
Those Bloody Vegos - a short history of vegetarianism
A plant-eating sleuth uncovers the hidden history of vegetarianism in Australia - featuring spiritualists, nudists, and politicians, plus plenty of nutmeat and a vegan dish called Hampstead Cutlets
5/23/2023 • 29 minutes, 56 seconds
The Unknown Sailor
A lost ship, A lost sailor, a lost identity. In November 1941 as war drew closer to Australia. the HMAS Sydney and its crew of 645 sailors disappeared off the Western Australian coast after being ambushed by a German raider. Months later the body of a sailor washed up on tiny Christmas Island and was laid to rest by locals. Half a century on this unknown sailor would help unravel the mystery of how the pride of Australia’s navy just vanished.
5/16/2023 • 30 minutes, 48 seconds
The Lost Boys of Daylesford
On a clear cold Sunday morning in June 1867, three little boys wandered away from their home near the town of Daylesford, on Dja Dja Wurrung country in central Victoria. Over the next six weeks the boys’ story gripped the colony.
5/9/2023 • 28 minutes, 35 seconds
Green Mountains Plane Crash
19th February 1937, a Stinson passenger plane leaves Brisbane for a routine flight to Sydney, but never it arrives. Instead, its disappearance sparks one of the most extensive air searches in Australia.
5/2/2023 • 28 minutes, 35 seconds
Edie's War
When Penny Bristol Jones inherited a battered trunk full of family documents and memorabilia, little did she know the rich wartime history she would uncover.
In amongst the bounty was a collection of diaries and letters written by Penny’s great grandmother Edie Digby, during the First World War, while her husband and two sons were away at the front.
4/25/2023 • 28 minutes, 35 seconds
The Great Australian Camel Race (part 2)
It’s 6 weeks into this epic 3300-kilometre adventure, and competitors face the longest leg of the race, across the Simpson Desert and into Queensland. The stakes are high, as they battle illness, flood, fatigue and flies, in the push towards the finish line on the Gold Coast, and call themselves the winner?
4/18/2023 • 28 minutes, 35 seconds
The Great Australian Camel Race (part 1)
It’s April 1988, somewhere near Uluru, and the starter gun kicks off one of the strangest, most audacious events to mark Australia's bicentennial year, the Great Australian Camel Race. People came from all around the world to take part in a feat which spanned over 3000km, as camels and humans endured scorching heat, flooding rains and serious sickness that almost sent the race belly-up.
4/11/2023 • 26 minutes, 10 seconds
The Kitchen Table - Spice
It's time to rethink the spices in your pantry. The long trade in clove and nutmeg lead to colonisation, but long before the Europeans arrived, it helped define the language, culture, religion and geography of Indonesia.
4/4/2023 • 33 minutes, 20 seconds
The Kitchen Table - Wine
What's the story behind your favourite wine? This fermented drink has long been an important part of Australia's social and cultural history, used for ceremonial, medicinal and celebratory purposes.
3/28/2023 • 30 minutes
The Kitchen Table - Salt
Behind your humble shaker of table salt lies a curious and industrious history
3/21/2023 • 30 minutes
The kitchen table - Tea
By the turn of the twentieth century Australians were the world’s most obsessive tea drinkers. Four cups with a meal wasn’t uncommon. Where did this insatiable thirst start? and did it ever really stop? A story about Australia's tea drinking history, and the beverage that keeps us brewing
The 1970s was a decade which saw social change, that helped foster new ideas and understandings about sex, gender and identity. And much of this change was brought about by trans activists.
In the last few decades, there has been a huge social transformation in the way people express and talk about gender. But right across time, and here in Australia, there’ve always been people who existed outside the binary definition of male and female.Compelling history from Australia and around the world.
2/28/2023 • 30 minutes
The Making of Mardi Gras: Supernova
In 2002, after a decade of giddy expansion, the bubble burst for the Sydney Gay and Lesbian Mardi Gras. With debts mounting and creditors circling, Mardi Gras went into voluntary administration. In the new millennium, had Mardi Gras lost its relevance?
2/21/2023 • 30 minutes
The Making of Mardi Gras (1979 -1981)
To mark 2023 World Pride, the origin story of Sydney Mardi Gras. How did a one-off street protest on a chilly winter's night more than 40 years ago transform into the massive annual summer celebration we now know?
2/14/2023 • 30 minutes
Mrs C Private Detective
A journey back to the mean streets of Brisbane in the 1920s with clever and feisty private detective – Mrs Kate Condon.
2/7/2023 • 30 minutes
Partition's children
When India was divided to create Pakistan more than a million people lost their lives. People who were there remember the chaos, violence and moments of kindness of Partition.
1/31/2023 • 30 minutes
Making Manganinnie
The story behind the 1980 Australian film Manganinne, set during the infamous Black Line violence of colonial Tasmania, and the extraordinary Yolngu actor, Mawuyul Yanthalawuy. who plays the film's central character.
1/24/2023 • 30 minutes
A Day at the Beach - Wanda 1982
Were you at the Wanda gig in 1982? It's forty years since Triple J hosted a free outdoor concert on Sydney's Wanda Beach, when a massive crowd turned up to see the bands whose music defined an era, and who changed the sound of Australian rock forever
1/17/2023 • 30 minutes
Play your way to happiness
It was the Great Depression in Australia. People dreamt of a paradise, an escape from Nowheresville. And they found it, gathering on the beaches of coastal cities and crowding halls in country towns - to play Hawaiian steel guitar. Historian Robyn Annear discovers what drove thousands of Australians to learn this unlikely instrument?
1/10/2023 • 30 minutes
Miner Poets - songs and verse from the west coast of Tasmania
We travel to the west coast of Tasmania, to meet the mining communities who carry on a rich cultural tradition of storytelling in poetry and song.
1/3/2023 • 30 minutes
Fairlight CMI - the sound you've never heard of
The Australian instrument that shaped the sound of the 1980s and forever changed how popular music was made
12/27/2022 • 30 minutes
Brother artist Hosea Easton
In 1899 two thousand people attended the funeral of an African-American banjo player in Sydney. Who was he? How did he come to be in Australia and why was he so loved? Stéphanie Kabanyana Kanyandekwe tells the story of Hosea Easton, along with the history of minstrel music and the banjo, in Australia and the United States.
12/20/2022 • 30 minutes
An Object in Time - The Flag
The story of one of history’s most mysterious flags - the Jolly Roger. It’s the pirate flag that defined one of the world’s greatest criminal enterprises and it helps us to understand how the high seas transformed from lawlessness to order
12/13/2022 • 30 minutes
An Object in Time | The Jewel
The story of the diamond so infused with underhand deeds and deadly acts that it was thought to curse any male ruler who wore it..
12/6/2022 • 30 minutes
An Object in Time | The Ball
The Carbolic Smoke Ball was touted as a miracle cure for all kinds of illnesses that were rife in the 1890s. It never actually cured anything, but what it did do was change the law forever.
11/29/2022 • 30 minutes
An Object in Time | The Potato
The humble potato is not just a lump of carbohydrate: it tells the story of how food, so essential to life, is also central to politics. This is the story of how the potato became a weapon.
11/22/2022 • 30 minutes
An Object in Time | The Briefcase
The story of briefcase that almost killed Hitler in 1944, how it was stopped only by a misplaced table leg, and the fate of the man at the heart of the assassination plot.
11/15/2022 • 0
Fitzroyalty — a short history of Brunswick Street
In the 1980s & '90s, an influx of artists and creative types changed the face of Melbourne’s Brunswick Street, in inner-city Fitzroy. What was once a humble industrial shopping strip transformed into a bustling hive of creativity, full of cafes, bars, art and music.
11/8/2022 • 0
Snapshots
A chance discovery of a bag of old photographs leads two Asian-Australian artists, Mayu Kanamori and William Yang, to explore their histories.
10/30/2022 • 30 minutes
No way back - the coolies of Christmas Island
In the early years of the twentieth century thousands of poor Chinese workers crossed the seas to a tiny dot in the middle of the Indian Ocean. Christmas Island was rich in phosphate, and when a British owned mine company set up on the island it needed workers. They came to seek their fortune and instead struck tragedy, as most of these men would never return home to China.
10/25/2022 • 30 minutes
Hume and Hovell and the pathfinders
In 1824 Hamilton Hume and William Hovell with 6 convicts began an expedition south-west of Sydney into the unknown. Governor Brisbane wanted to find an inland route from Sydney all the way to Bass Strait.
The country however was neither unknown nor uninhabited. Hamilton Hume's friendship with and assistance from local Aboriginal groups throughout the journey enabled the opening up of some of the most pristine land in New South Wales and Victoria
10/18/2022 • 0
Operation Copperhead or ' I was Monty's Double'
The D-Day landings in 1944 involved a lot of planning, deception, and in one case as comedic as it was dangerous, a bloke from Perth. An outlandish wartime caper that ended up on the silver screen.
10/11/2022 • 30 minutes
Impostors: If it's endangered, we want it
Ecology didn’t exist in the nineteenth century. So, when, where, and how did it first begin in Australia?
10/4/2022 • 0
Impostors: If it lives, we want it
In the 1860s, a group of well-intentioned settlers introduced animals from overseas, hoping they would thrive in Australia. Many did. Too many.
9/27/2022 • 28 minutes, 42 seconds
Play your way to happiness
It was the Great Depression in Australia. People dreamt of a paradise, an escape from Nowheresville. And they found it, gathering on the beaches of coastal cities and crowding halls in country towns - to play Hawaiian steel guitar. Historian Robyn Annear discovers what drove thousands of Australians to learn this unlikely instrument?
9/20/2022 • 0
The Confidence Men
What if the only tool you had to escape from a WWI Turkish prison camp was a homemade Ouija board?
9/13/2022 • 0
Queen Elizabeth II and Australians
Daniel Browning presents this special tribute to Her Majesty Queen Elizabeth II, looking at the relationship she had with Australians; from the adoration she was shown in the 1954 tour to her extensive Aboriginal art collection and the way so many Australian women saw her as a role model.
Guests: Jane Connors, Historian. Juliet Rieden, Editor-at-large of The Australian Women's Weekly
9/9/2022 • 32 minutes
The Loveday Trilogy Part 3 | Miyakatsu Koike
The story of a stoic, humane and wise man who was in the wrong place at the wrong time.
9/6/2022 • 0
The Loveday Trilogy Part 2 | Francesco Fantin
The tragic tale of a man sent to a detention camp where he was surrounded by his political enemies.
8/30/2022 • 0
The Loveday Trilogy Part 1 | Oskar Speck
The story of one man's mind-bendingly long kayak journey that lead to an Australian Detention camp in World War 2.
8/23/2022 • 0
Maiden's Eucalypts
This story is set on Worimi and Biripi country in the year 1894 The avid colonial botanist Joseph Maiden is making a trip through the forests around the NSW towns of Stroud and Gloucester, recording every tree, leaf, and plant he encounters in meticulous detail in his journal. 130 years later historian Jodi Frawley re-traces Maiden's journey, using his original records as a guide.
8/16/2022 • 0
Maiden's Eucalypts
This story is set on Worimi and Biripi country in the year 1894 The avid colonial botanist Joseph Maiden is making a trip through the forests around the NSW towns of Stroud and Gloucester, recording every tree, leaf, and plant he encounters in meticulous detail in his journal. 130 years later historian Jodi Frawley re-traces Maiden's journey, using his original records as a guide.
8/16/2022 • 0
Inexpressible Island
The little known story of perhaps the greatest endurance feat in Antarctic history. The survival of Robert Falcon Scott's Northern Party in the winter of 1912.
8/9/2022 • 28 minutes, 20 seconds
The man with the wooden shotgun
Britta Jorgensen grew up hearing many tales about her great Uncle Keith Byson, whose life sounded like something out of a children's story book - that he was a hermit who lived in a shack on a deserted island in the Great Barrier Reef, warding off strangers with a wooden shotgun, and who got around in his underwear. Years after his death Britta heads to her uncle's island home, to try and sort out the truth from the tall tales
8/2/2022 • 26 minutes, 13 seconds
Finding Harry Valentine
Hidden family truths are discovered as two sisters follow the trail of their late fathers' secret life.
7/26/2022 • 28 minutes, 35 seconds
First port of asylum
On the night Dai Le was elected to Federal Parliament as an Independent she was remembering being a frightened 10 years old, out in the open sea, escaping Vietnam in a boat. For The History Listen Dai returns to the place she first landed, Hong Kong, looking for traces of the refugee camp where she lived, worked in factories and like so many thousands, waited for a visa to The West.
7/19/2022 • 28 minutes, 35 seconds
Fanny Smith: Icon
In 1899, twenty-three years after her people were declared ‘extinct’, Fanny Smith made a revolutionary recording where she announced to the world that she was The Last Tasmanian. Far from ‘extinct’, she was a proud Aboriginal woman raising her eleven children and publicly singing and speaking her Pakana language. This is her extraordinary story.
7/12/2022 • 28 minutes, 35 seconds
The Friendship Spitfire: Jack Dawson Green's WW2 story
A story of swagger, bravery, skill and ultimately, friendship, set on the frontline of war
7/5/2022 • 28 minutes, 35 seconds
Acting on a High Wire - a short history of television drama
From the very first night that ABC television beamed into loungerooms around Australia, it offered audiences live drama, initially plays and then serials. The story of the generation of pioneers who helped to create a new art form, shake off the cultural shackles of England, and pave the way for the Australian television which went on to conquer the world.
6/28/2022 • 28 minutes, 38 seconds
Too Old To Run - the Drug Grannies ep 2
In the summer of 1978, Australian narcotics agents intercepted a campervan being unloaded on the Melbourne docks. What they discovered inside the van turned out to be the largest haul of an illicit substance, black hashish, to land on Australian soil at the time. The campervan belonged to two elderly American women tourists, whose overseas holiday odyssey quickly spiralled into a hellish nightmare.
6/21/2022 • 28 minutes, 35 seconds
Too Old To Run - the Drug Grannies ep 1
In the summer of 1978, narcotics agents discovered the largest ever haul of illicit drugs to land in Australia, stashed inside a campervan belonging to two elderly American women tourists. But were these women truly drug smugglers or naive puppets in an elaborate plot masterminded by someone else?
6/14/2022 • 28 minutes, 37 seconds
A Day at the Beach - Wanda 1982
Were you at the Wanda gig in 1982? It's forty years since Triple J hosted a free outdoor concert on Sydney's Wanda Beach, where a massive crowd turned up to see the bands whose music defined an era, and who changed the sound of Australian rock forever
6/7/2022 • 29 minutes, 4 seconds
Rottnest Island: White playground
How did the largest deaths in custody site in Australia become a tourist mecca?
5/31/2022 • 28 minutes, 48 seconds
Rottnest Island: Black prison
The dark history of Western Australia’s idyllic holiday playground.
5/24/2022 • 28 minutes, 35 seconds
Australia's greatest miscarriage of justice? The Croatian Six - part two
In 1979 a man named Vico Virkez gave a surprise tip off that would lead to one of the longest criminal trials, and some say, the greatest miscarriage of justice, in Australian history.
5/17/2022 • 28 minutes, 35 seconds
Australia's greatest miscarriage of justice? The Croatian Six - part one
The story of six Croatian Australian men who were incarcerated for 15 years for crimes they say they never committed.
40 years later, new evidence has been found in their favour.
5/10/2022 • 28 minutes, 35 seconds
Samuel Plimsoll sails to quarantine
Diaries from two voyages to Sydney aboard the famous Scottish clipper, Samuel Plimsoll.
It was a perilous time to be at sea. Disease and fever spread through the ship.
Both journeys ended prematurely at Sydney's North Head quarantine station.
5/3/2022 • 28 minutes, 35 seconds
Fairlight CMI - the sound you've never heard of
The Australian instrument that shaped the sound of the 1980s and forever changed how popular music was made
4/26/2022 • 31 minutes, 39 seconds
Sister Edith Blake WW I
Sister Edith Blake’s gripping story, from her training in Sydney to nursing Australian soldiers in Gallipoli, to her tragic death in English waters where Germany had promised the safe passage of hospital ships.
4/19/2022 • 36 minutes, 6 seconds
Buried Treasure - the story of Lake Pedder
Lake Pedder, in Tasmania’s vast south-west region, was known for its pink quartzite beach, its pristine waters, and its rugged beauty. 50 years ago, it became the site for one of the fiercest conservation battles ever seen in Australia
4/12/2022 • 28 minutes, 35 seconds
The Benalla Experiment
Australia's least remembered migrant camp for 'unsupported' mothers.
4/5/2022 • 28 minutes, 35 seconds
The job with the best view in the world
Working on the Sydney Harbour Bridge isn't for the fainthearted. Angela Heathcote’s dad Kelly told her adventurous tales of working up high on the famous arches. Years after his passing she meets more of the men and women who brave; the elements, the larrikinism, the fireworks and the brushes with death to maintain this Sydney icon.
3/29/2022 • 34 minutes, 2 seconds
William Ah Ket: the first Chinese-Australian barrister
In 1904, William Ah Ket became Australia’s first Chinese barrister. He went on to fight racist laws and social prejudice in and out of court.
3/22/2022 • 34 minutes, 27 seconds
Nah Doongh's story
Nah Doongh's story tells of a life that was lost and found; a life that spanned the entire 19th century and bore witness to the colonisation of Australia. It is also a story of love, loss and one woman’s tenacity to die on the land on which she was born.
3/15/2022 • 28 minutes, 35 seconds
Steely women
Forty years ago Australian women weren't fighting for equal pay, they were fighting for an equal right to work. This is the story of our nation's largest class action claim, instigated by a group of blue-collar women against the company known as The Big Australian.
3/8/2022 • 28 minutes, 35 seconds
The bay leaves of West Terrace cemetery
The uplifting story of the Baby Memorial at Adelaide's West Terrace cemetery.
3/1/2022 • 33 minutes, 21 seconds
Only Joking
Comedian David Rose digs into the archives and discovers a very personal story: about a life lived on stage, the parallels of history, and a surprising family legacy which dates all the way back to the music hall era
2/22/2022 • 28 minutes, 35 seconds
Fight for the Forest
In an unprecedented political move, the Western Australian state government will end logging of native forest. Meet the people who have dedicated their lives to saving these incredible forests.
2/15/2022 • 28 minutes, 35 seconds
Mrs C private detective
A journey back to the mean streets of Brisbane in the 1920’s with feisty private detective – Mrs Kate Condon.
2/8/2022 • 27 minutes, 35 seconds
The lost journal of Jeanne Barret: Part 2
The continuation of the amazing story of the first woman to sail around the world.
2/1/2022 • 30 minutes, 34 seconds
The lost journal of Jeanne Barret: Part 1
The amazing story of the first woman to sail around the world.
1/25/2022 • 30 minutes, 14 seconds
Tommy Walker and the bone collector
Ngarrindjeri elder Major Sumner tells the tale of two men from the opposite ends of Adelaide society at the turn of the twentieth century. The fates of fringe-dweller Tommy Walker and State Coroner William Ramsay Smith entwined and ultimately exposed what was really going on in the mortuaries, gaols, medical schools and graveyards of South Australia at that time.
1/18/2022 • 28 minutes, 36 seconds
The Little Sparrow - the ASIO spy inside the Communist Party
In the early 1950s Adelaide housewife Anne Neill made a life-changing decision: she joined the Communist Party of Australia, and ended up travelling behind the Iron Curtain and befriending KGB spy Vladimir Petrov. But what did this extraordinary woman truly believe in?
1/11/2022 • 28 minutes, 36 seconds
Yarramundi and the people of Dyarubbin
Dyarubbin, the mighty Hawkesbury River, winds its way along the foot of the Blue Mountains, around the north western rim of Sydney’s Cumberland Plain. Settlement along the river, like much of Australia’s history, has been told from a colonial perspective. We hear from Darug knowledge holders about their long and enduring relationship with this country, and the river they know as Dyarubbin
1/4/2022 • 28 minutes, 36 seconds
Diamond Jack, Smirnov and the Pelikaan
A wild ride involving a Russian flying ace, an escape from Java in World War 2, and a missing package of diamonds.
12/28/2021 • 28 minutes, 36 seconds
The Lost Boys of Daylesford
On a clear cold Sunday morning in June 1867, three little boys wandered away from their home near the town of Daylesford, on Dja Dja Wurrung country in central Victoria. Over the next six weeks the boys’ story gripped the colony.
12/21/2021 • 28 minutes, 36 seconds
Finding Eve Langley, writing a life
Where does the life of Australian poet and writer Eve Langley end and her fiction begin?
12/14/2021 • 34 minutes, 55 seconds
Commemorating James Stirling?
The statue of Western Australia's first governor, Captain James Stirling, in central Perth is hard to miss; there's also a mountain range, a suburban municipality and even a school named after him. But as the state looks towards its bicentenary in 2029, new questions are being asked about James Stirling, including his involvement in frontier violence and in the British slave trade. How should he be remembered?
12/7/2021 • 29 minutes, 21 seconds
Caribbean Convicts in Australia
In 1836, the convict ship the Moffatt left Portsmouth harbour in England to travel halfway around the world to the colony of NSW. On board were eighteen convicts from the West Indies, including former slaves William Buchanan and Richard Holt.
Jamaica born, Sydney based author Sienna Brown goes on a deep dive into the archives to uncover the little known history of these men, and their lives in Australia.
11/30/2021 • 28 minutes, 35 seconds
Respect! - the 1986 Nurses Strike
In the lead up to Christmas 1986, a battle was fought on the streets, in the hospital wards, and on the tram lines around Melbourne. Nurses, trained to care for the sick with no complaint or question, had had enough. Tired of overcrowded wards, poor pay and lack of career opportunity, they decided to take matters into their own hands.
11/23/2021 • 28 minutes, 35 seconds
150 years at the Art Gallery of NSW
For most of its life, the Art Gallery of NSW was dank and dingy. In the 1970s, there was no air conditioning or electric lights in its exhibition spaces. A short history of this institutions' amazing transformation.
11/16/2021 • 28 minutes, 35 seconds
Resonate
Nazi collaborator is a label that still resonates in Belgium 75 years after the end of the Second World War. Peter Lenaerts grew up listening to his grandmother’s stories, about her brother Paul and how, one night in September 1944, he was dragged out of bed and nearly killed by an angry mob, about her brother Bert, who volunteered and fought in the horrors of the Eastern Front. Peter’s intrigued and goes digging in the archives to understand why his family took one side in the war and what happened to them because of that decision. He discovers that in war it’s never a simple story of winners and losers.
11/9/2021 • 29 minutes, 12 seconds
Brother artist Hosea Easton
In 1899 two thousand people attended the funeral of an African-American banjo player in Sydney. Who was he? How did he come to be in Australia and why was he so loved? Stéphanie Kabanyana Kanyandekwe tells the story of Hosea Easton, along with the history of minstrel music and the banjo, in Australia and the United States.
11/2/2021 • 36 minutes, 48 seconds
Henson Park: the eighth wonder
History, tragedy, and triumph. Marrickville’s Henson Park is an icon of Sydney's inner west.
But before the unshakable Newtown Jets footy fans called it home, the community oval was a giant hole in the ground supplying Sydney's building boom.
When at least nine children drowned at the site, council took charge and began to dream big. It paid off for them when their hidden suburban park wound up on the world stage.
10/26/2021 • 28 minutes, 35 seconds
May Wirth: bareback riding queen
'I can do things no woman ever did before in the history of the circus business.' May Wirth
10/19/2021 • 28 minutes, 35 seconds
Pentridge prison: a violent past and complicated present
There's a brutal history behind the imposing walls of Melbourne's Pentridge prison, stretching from 1851 right up until its closure in 1997. Today there's a playground, supermarket, cinema and apartments on site – but not everyone's happy about it. Those who know Pentridge best offer their answers to a difficult question: how should you treat a site with such a violent past?
10/12/2021 • 28 minutes, 36 seconds
Ray Denning part 2: stitch up
With nothing to lose, Raymond Denning escapes Grafton prison in a rubbish bin.
He has help from prisoner rights groups and an agenda to raise awareness about police corruption.
The man-hunt for Denning turns farcical when he uses the media to make the police look foolish.
9/28/2021 • 34 minutes, 18 seconds
Ray Denning part 1: breaking out
The story of one of Australia's most misunderstood criminals.
After a traumatic childhood, Raymond Denning jumps from juvenile detention to jail.
When an escape attempt goes wrong, a prison warder is critically injured and the finger is pointed at Denning.
As his treatment within the correctional system deteriorates Denning begins to find his voice.
9/21/2021 • 28 minutes, 26 seconds
You are not alone: 100 years of PEN International Part 2
Have writers been imprisoned in Australia for their work? Most definitely and PEN has worked to have them freed. In this history of PEN in Australia Arnold Zable tells the story of Cheikh Kone, a journalist from the Ivory Coast who was detained in Port Hedland and writer Behrouz Boochani detained on Manus Island. As well as the letters members of PEN have written to imprisoned writers around the world, like those in Myanmar, to tell them that they are not alone.
I am a stranger to you but please know that you are no stranger to me – Maria Tumarkin in a letter to Kylie Moore-Gilbert, an Australian writer detained in Iran until recently.
9/14/2021 • 28 minutes, 35 seconds
You are not alone: 100 years of PEN International Part 1
Writers go to prison for the courageous pursuit of their craft and PEN has been working to get them out. Melbourne writer Arnold Zable tells the story of PEN International - from its creation out of the scars of World War 1 to bring societies together through their literature, to its growing human rights work across the globe, protecting freedom of speech and supporting imprisoned writers.
If you don’t know the truth you can’t act – Jennifer Clements - President of PEN International
9/7/2021 • 28 minutes, 35 seconds
The curious geologist
How a South Australian geologist named Reg Sprigg helped solve Charles Darwin's dilemma
8/31/2021 • 30 minutes, 9 seconds
Seachange: 20 years on from the Tampa Affair
When a Norwegian container ship - the MV Tampa – rescued 438 asylum seekers from a sinking boat on August 26, 2001 who was to know the political fallout it would leave in its wake?
8/24/2021 • 53 minutes, 30 seconds
Miner Poets - songs and verse from the west coast of Tasmania
We travel to the west coast of Tasmania, to meet the mining communities who carry on a rich cultural tradition of storytelling in poetry and song.
8/17/2021 • 28 minutes, 35 seconds
Stories from the Archibald
On the 100th anniversary of Sydney's Archibald portrait prize, artist Wendy Sharpe takes a look at some its most controversial moments.
8/10/2021 • 28 minutes, 35 seconds
Alone with J.S. Bach
The music of Johann Sebastian Bach is a lifetime companion for many violinists. And in our time of Covid-19 isolation, his Six Sonatas and Partitas for Solo Violin have taken on a new resonance. These pieces are spiritual, virtuosic, joyful - and enigmatic.
8/3/2021 • 31 minutes, 41 seconds
Whitlam's China chance: the origins of the Australia-China relationship
In the Cold War winter of July 1971 ALP leader Gough Whitlam made an audacious trip to Beijing. This is the story of the events, 50 years ago, that turned Australia towards communist China.
7/27/2021 • 32 minutes, 47 seconds
Those Bloody Vegos - a short history of vegetarianism in Australia
Early in 2020, a vegetarian version of the iconic Four’N Twenty meat pie hit service stations around the country. For lifelong vego Carly Godden, this re-imagining of an Aussie classic was a sign - vegetarianism had finally gone mainstream.
7/20/2021 • 29 minutes, 57 seconds
Escape from Greece 1941
One soldier's incredible World War II escape story through southern Europe. Why haven't Australian's heard more about the heroic ANZAC campaign in Greece?
ON the 80th anniversary of the Battle of Tempe Gorge, the story is revealed.
7/13/2021 • 28 minutes, 35 seconds
Yarramundi and the people of Dyarubbin
Dyarubbin, the mighty Hawkesbury River, winds its way along the foot of the Blue Mountains, around the north western rim of Sydney’s Cumberland Plain. Settlement along the river, like much of Australia’s history, has been told from a colonial perspective. We hear from Darug knowledge holders about their long and enduring relationship with this country, and the river they know as Dyarubbin
7/6/2021 • 30 minutes, 54 seconds
How hypnosis brought the CIA to Australia
Martin Orne was one of the leading psychologists of the 20th century, his specialty was the science of hypnosis. In the 1960s, his scientific method brought him to the University of Sydney, and it's world respected psychology faculty. Unbeknownst to his Australian researchers, however, Professor Orne was being secretly funded by the CIA, in their Cold War quest to control the human mind.
6/29/2021 • 28 minutes, 35 seconds
An Object in Time - The Whip
The whip played a central role in the development of Australia. What can it tell us about our society today?
6/22/2021 • 28 minutes, 35 seconds
An Object in Time - The Ginger Beer
The refreshing beverage that revolutionised the law.
6/15/2021 • 28 minutes, 35 seconds
An Object in Time - The Envelope
An envelope is a humdrum communications device – except when it’s full of misinformation, tucked into the pocket of a dead man, and dropped by a submarine off the coast of wartime Spain.
6/8/2021 • 28 minutes, 35 seconds
An Object in Time - The Cup of Tea
The story of how the humble cup of tea came to represent a ruthless British Empire.
6/1/2021 • 28 minutes, 37 seconds
An Object in Time - The Ticker Tape
How did one long, skinny strip of paper plunge the world into the worst global economic downturn history had ever seen?
5/25/2021 • 28 minutes, 35 seconds
An Object in Time - The Train Carriage
The story of the train carriage which propelled the globe from WWI, straight into WWII.
5/18/2021 • 28 minutes, 36 seconds
An Object in Time - The Telephone
This special podcast extra episode tells the story of the world's most powerful, imaginary telephone.
5/13/2021 • 17 minutes, 17 seconds
An Object in Time - The Pistol
This pistol lies at the centre of one of history's most famous duels - Hamilton Vs. Burr.
5/11/2021 • 28 minutes, 36 seconds
An Object in Time - The Umbrella
Umbrellas aren't known for being dangerous, but this one is famous for being deadly.
5/4/2021 • 28 minutes, 35 seconds
The Kitchen Table — Spice
The clove and nutmeg trade not only lead to colonisation, but long before the Europeans arrived, it helped define the language, culture, religion and geographic spread of Indonesia.
4/27/2021 • 33 minutes, 25 seconds
The Kitchen Table - Wine
What's the story behind your favourite wine? This fermented beverage has long been an important part of Australia's social and cultural history, used for ceremonial, medicinal and celebratory purposes.
4/20/2021 • 28 minutes, 35 seconds
The Kitchen Table — Salt
Behind your humble shaker of table salt lies a curious and industrious history
4/13/2021 • 28 minutes, 35 seconds
The Kitchen Table - Tea
By the turn of the twentieth century Australians were the world’s most obsessive tea drinkers. Four cups with a meal wasn’t uncommon. Where did this insatiable thirst start? and did it ever really stop? A story about Australia's tea drinking history, and the beverage that keeps us brewing
4/6/2021 • 28 minutes, 35 seconds
The Little Sparrow - the ASIO spy inside the Communist Party
In the early 1950s Adelaide housewife Anne Neill made a life-changing decision: she joined the Communist Party of Australia, and ended up travelling behind the Iron Curtain and befriending KGB spy Vladimir Petrov. But what did this extraordinary woman truly believe in?
3/30/2021 • 28 minutes, 35 seconds
The story of Kevin 'the Head' Brennan: Bondi surfing legend
The story of 1960s surfing legend Kevin Brennan charts a young man's path to fame and to premature obscurity set against the backdrop of Sydney's Bondi Beach.
3/23/2021 • 28 minutes, 35 seconds
The Lost Boys of Daylesford
On a clear cold Sunday morning in June 1867, three little boys wandered away from their home near the town of Daylesford, on Dja Dja Wurrung country in central Victoria. Over the next six weeks the boys’ story gripped the colony.
3/16/2021 • 28 minutes, 35 seconds
The harder they fall - stories of life and death in the South East Forests of NSW
Immerse yourself in the sounds and histories of the old growth forests; from logging to woodchipping, protesting and preserving.
3/9/2021 • 35 minutes, 25 seconds
The Train is Back
The Overland is a train whose tracks were once plagued by both squabbling and pandemic. But it is back, although both the plague and the squabbling still exist.
3/2/2021 • 28 minutes, 33 seconds
Who was Jimmy Possum?
There’s a mystery surrounding the elegant and ingenious Jimmy Possum chairs that were made 130 years ago in Tasmania. Did their maker live in a tree trunk? Did he even exist? Claudia Taranto goes in search of the real Jimmy Possum and learns about the enduring power of a good story.
2/23/2021 • 28 minutes, 35 seconds
Windradyne's forgotten war
In 1824, the British waged war against the Wiradjuri people of western NSW. It was known as the Bathurst War and it shook the new colony. But many Australians have never heard of it, or of the heroic Wiradjuri warrior, Windradyne. The town is now remembering this history.
2/16/2021 • 28 minutes, 35 seconds
Australia's greatest miscarriage of justice? The Croatian Six - part two
In 1979 a man named Vico Virkez gave a surprise tip off that would lead to one of the longest criminal trials, and some say, the greatest miscarriage of justice, in Australian history.
2/9/2021 • 28 minutes, 35 seconds
Australia's greatest miscarriage of justice? The Croatian Six - part one
The story of six Croatian Australian men who were incarcerated for 15 years for crimes they say they never committed.
40 years later, new evidence has been found in their favour.
2/2/2021 • 28 minutes, 35 seconds
Diamond Jack, Smirnov and the Pelikaan
A wild ride involving a Russian flying ace, an escape from Java in World War 2, and a missing package of diamonds.
1/26/2021 • 31 minutes, 5 seconds
Spies, lies and hairdryers - How a single mum became a double agent in Cold War Australia
In the 1950s a romantic proposition by a Russian diplomat transformed Kay Marshall from an admin worker into one of Australia’s most important double agents. It was the beginning of a four-year intelligence operation which revealed that there was more going on at the Soviet Embassy than met the eye.
1/19/2021 • 28 minutes, 32 seconds
Manuscripts Don't Burn: The Master and Margarita
Russian writer Mikhail Bulgakov’s most famous novel, The Master and Margarita, was written during the brutal 1930s Stalinist purges. It's become a cult classic, inspiring artists like Patti Smith and the Rolling Stones. Find out why.
1/12/2021 • 28 minutes, 34 seconds
Heavenly and demonic: the story of the saxophone
Find out why, in its relatively short history, one instrument has offended ideologues, drawn the ire of dictators, and been reviled and outlawed.
1/5/2021 • 28 minutes, 34 seconds
Two spoons — the general who plotted to kill Hitler
A little known assassination attempt against Hitler cast its shadow over a family in Sweden. Johan Gabrielsson digs deep into the family vault and discovers the complicated truth about one of his distant relatives.
12/29/2020 • 28 minutes, 35 seconds
Tupaia, star navigator
In 1768 when James Cook sailed from Tahiti looking for the great southern land, Tupaia, a traditional Polynesia navigator was on board.
His knowledge proved invaluable to Cook and his sailing skills astounded the crew. What role did Tupaia actually play in the voyage and why haven't we heard heard about him?
12/22/2020 • 28 minutes, 33 seconds
Experiment street — the true history of a city lane
It's the early 1900's in Sydney. Fictional Pyrmont resident and neighbourhood gossip Lizzie Absalom tells what really went on in those back lanes.
12/15/2020 • 29 minutes, 34 seconds
Silence at the sugar mill
Every family has a secret, the saying goes. But the Ninnes family had a big one.
It wasn't until eldest daughter Mae was 80 years old that she began to talk. And the skeletons came out of the cupboard.
In this program Mae's daughter Lesley searches for answers to the silence and the secrecy of her mother's childhood.
12/8/2020 • 28 minutes, 34 seconds
Clutha 1970 - the biggest battle over coal you’ve never heard of
A huge coal project by a foreign company. Environmentalists concerned about the impacts. A government talking about jobs. Sound familiar?
But this battle happened 50 years ago, when a small group waged a David–and-Goliath campaign against a coal terminal planned for the coast south of Sydney.
12/1/2020 • 28 minutes, 35 seconds
Australia and the rise of terrorism; a tale of this century
The September 11th attacks in the United States by Al Qaeda changed the way western countries perceived the threat of terrorism. Before the events of 2001, Australia had no national terrorism laws. But fifteen years later it would have more terror-related laws in place than any other comparable nation.
11/24/2020 • 32 minutes, 49 seconds
A picturesque colonial landscape
A radio journey into John Glover's 1835 painting A view of the artist's house and garden, in Mills Plains, Van Diemen's Land.
11/17/2020 • 39 minutes, 29 seconds
The Scholar's Hut
In 1881, an extraordinary teacher arrived at Maloga Aboriginal mission. His students changed Australian history. Great great grandson and Yorta Yorta man Daniel James tells the story of Thomas Shadrach James.
11/10/2020 • 28 minutes, 35 seconds
The air of heaven - Australian women jockeys
When Michelle Payne won the Melbourne Cup in 2015 there were three female jockeys who were with her in spirit. They all challenged the male-dominated racing industry, pushed on by the air of heaven.
11/3/2020 • 28 minutes, 35 seconds
Songs of the last convict ship
In January 1868, the last convict ship to Australia, The Hougoumont, docked in Fremantle, Western Australia, off-loading its' human cargo, including a group of Irish political prisoners. This is the story of the long sea journey told through the diaries kept by some of the Irishmen and the songs and music they played on board.
10/27/2020 • 35 minutes, 46 seconds
Tommy Walker and the bone collector
Ngarrindjeri elder Major Sumner tells the tale of two men from the opposite ends of Adelaide society at the turn of the twentieth century. The fates of fringe-dweller Tommy Walker and State Coroner William Ramsay Smith entwined and ultimately exposed what was really going on in the mortuaries, gaols, medical schools and graveyards of South Australia at that time.
10/20/2020 • 34 minutes, 21 seconds
The Black-Allan Line
Australia's state borders have taken on new significance in this pandemic year. The history of the border between NSW and Victoria is full of strange twists and turns, a murder and some very messy politics.
10/13/2020 • 28 minutes, 35 seconds
Only Joking
Comedian David Rose digs into the archives and discovers a very personal story; one about a life lived on stage, the parallels of history, and a surprising family legacy which dates all the way back to the music hall era
10/6/2020 • 28 minutes, 35 seconds
Salleh Ben Joned: A Most Unlikely Malay (Part 2 of 2)
Malaysian poet and writer Salleh Ben Joned is an incendiary critic with satirical wit, and at nearly 80 he’s become a bit of an underground ‘legend’. Eldest daughter Anna charts the highs and lows of her father’s return to Malaysia after an influential decade in Hobart, Tasmania.
9/29/2020 • 35 minutes, 17 seconds
Salleh Ben Joned: A Most Unlikely Malay (Part 1 of 2)
Salleh Ben Joned is a witty, fearless and charismatic poet and writer that some have called the ‘bad boy of Malaysian literature’. Come on a wild ride through his life and times with his eldest daughter Anna, starting with the influential decade he spent in Australia as a young Colombo Plan scholar.
9/22/2020 • 32 minutes, 22 seconds
Follow the Flame
It's 20 years since Sydney hosted the Olympics, and one of the most memorable parts of the 2000 games was the torch relay. This story follows the journey of the flame, from the red dirt country of Uluru to the suburbs of Sydney, hearing the tales and memories that it fuelled along the way.
9/15/2020 • 28 minutes, 35 seconds
Alone with J.S. Bach
The music of Johann Sebastian Bach is a lifetime companion for many violinists. And in our time of Covid-19 isolation, his Six Sonatas and Partitas for Solo Violin have taken on a new resonance. These pieces are spiritual, virtuosic, joyful - and enigmatic.
9/8/2020 • 30 minutes, 34 seconds
2025: The end of tape
There’s a number going around audio-visual archivist circles, that has many of them worried: 2025. Magnetic tape — from reel-to-reel, to cassettes and VHS — that is not digitised by 2025 might be lost forever.
9/1/2020 • 33 minutes, 55 seconds
Elisabeth Krämer-Bannow: a portrait of the artist in New Ireland
Through the chance finding of an old German book in an antiquarian bookshop we discover the life and work of Elisabeth Krämer-Bannow, an artist and ethnographer who explored New Ireland in 1908.
8/25/2020 • 47 minutes, 23 seconds
Hay's war: when the Japanese came to inland Australia Part 2
A cavalcade of Japanese Prisoners of War, in makeshift 'cages' on the back of utes and small trucks, makes its way across dusty western NSW. Tension in Hay ramps up, peaking on one long night of drama when it appears the POWs are making another escape attempt.
8/18/2020 • 29 minutes, 4 seconds
Hay's war: When the Japanese came to inland Australia Part 1
The mysterious war-time drowning of a young woman in the Murrumbidgee River leads Ann Arnold on a trail of drama and suspense, from the Torres Strait to the outback.
8/11/2020 • 28 minutes, 35 seconds
Spies, lies and hairdryers - How a single mum became a double agent in Cold War Australia
In the 1950s a romantic proposition from a Russian diplomat transformed Kay Marshall from an admin worker into one of Australia’s most important double agents. It was the beginning of a four-year intelligence operation which revealed that there was more going on at the Soviet Embassy than met the eye.
8/4/2020 • 28 minutes, 35 seconds
Two spoons — the general who plotted to kill Hitler
A little known assassination attempt against Hitler cast its shadow over a family in Sweden. Johan Gabrielsson digs deep into the family vault and discovers the complicated truth about one of his distant relatives.
7/28/2020 • 28 minutes, 26 seconds
Nah Doongh's story
Nah Doongh's story tells of a life that was lost and found; a life that spanned the entire 19th century and bore witness to the colonisation of Australia. It is also a story of love, loss and one woman’s tenacity to die on the land on which she was born.
7/21/2020 • 28 minutes, 35 seconds
The Sisters Overseas Service (SOS)
In 1977, the New Zealand government passed the Contraception, Sterilisation, and Abortion Act which made it virtually impossible for a woman to legally terminate an unwanted pregnancy. Enter the group known as the Sisters Overseas Service (SOS); this is their little known story.
7/14/2020 • 28 minutes, 35 seconds
Waterloo Bay: that word "massacre"
What happens when a small town puts the word "massacre" on an historical monument?
7/7/2020 • 28 minutes, 35 seconds
Manuscripts Don't Burn: The Master and Margarita
Russian writer Mikhail Bulgakov’s most famous novel, The Master and Margarita, was written during the brutal 1930s Stalinist purges. It has become a cult classic; inspiring artists like Patti Smith and the Rolling Stones we ask why.
6/30/2020 • 30 minutes, 36 seconds
The Ferry Plot
Cold war Australia 1949. The enemy was everywhere, and according to many the country was in extreme danger. Enter Diver Dobson, and a drama that entertained and enthralled Australians as they navigated an uncertain decade.
6/23/2020 • 28 minutes, 30 seconds
Forgotten men of a forgotten war
What would it take to bring home the 43 Australian servicemen still missing from the Korean War?
6/16/2020 • 28 minutes, 35 seconds
A Short History of Soap
A soap opera about soap starring the Hungarian doctor Ignaz Semmelweis.
6/9/2020 • 28 minutes, 35 seconds
Section 71 - the Race Power bonus episode
An extra episode in the series about High Court cases which have changed Australia. Series producer Jane Lee unpicks the origins and uses of Section 51(26) of the Australian Constitution, which gives the federal parliament the power to make special laws for a particular race of people.
6/4/2020 • 11 minutes, 41 seconds
Section 71: The Hindmarsh Island Bridge Affair (Part 2)
In the second part of the long running and divisive case known as the Hindmarsh Island bridge affair, the battle heads inside the High Court.
6/2/2020 • 27 minutes, 53 seconds
Section 71: The Hindmarsh Island Bridge Affair (Part 2)
In the second part of the long running and divisive case known as the Hindmarsh Island bridge affair, the battle heads inside the High Court.
6/2/2020 • 27 minutes, 53 seconds
Section 71: The Hindmarsh Island Bridge Affair (Part 1)
Ever wondered how the term "secret women's business" entered the Australian lexicon? It's part of a bitter legal battle over land, culture and history in South Australia.
5/26/2020 • 28 minutes, 36 seconds
Section 71: The Hindmarsh Island Bridge Affair (Part 1)
Ever wondered how the term "secret women's business" entered the Australian lexicon? It's part of a bitter legal battle over land, culture and history in South Australia.
5/26/2020 • 28 minutes, 36 seconds
Section 71: Communists, Terrorists and the High Court
How much power does the federal government have to protect Australians from international threats?
5/19/2020 • 28 minutes, 38 seconds
Section 71: Communists, Terrorists and the High Court
How much power does the federal government have to protect Australians from international threats?
5/19/2020 • 28 minutes, 38 seconds
Section 71: The High Court Dog-Fight on Schools Funding
The High Court showdown over religious freedom that could help you understand how schools are funded to this day.
5/12/2020 • 28 minutes, 38 seconds
Section 71: The High Court Dog-Fight on Schools Funding
The High Court showdown over religious freedom that could help you understand how schools are funded to this day.
5/12/2020 • 28 minutes, 38 seconds
Section 71: The Tasmanian crime of gay sex
It might surprise you to learn that until 1997, a man could go to jail for up to 21 years for having sex with another man in Australia.
5/5/2020 • 28 minutes, 38 seconds
Section 71: The Tasmanian crime of gay sex
It might surprise you to learn that until 1997, a man could go to jail for up to 21 years for having sex with another man in Australia.
5/5/2020 • 28 minutes, 38 seconds
Never M.O.R.. the audacious audio of Andrew McLennan
Colleagues called him maestro, visionary, experimenter, radio magic man. To long-time close friend, John Bell, he was “Merry Andrew”.
This is the story of an unsung legend in Australian broadcasting and radio as you may not have heard it.
Andrew McLennan's friends and collaborators speak up.
4/28/2020 • 40 minutes, 16 seconds
Edie's War
When Penny Bristol Jones inherited a battered trunk full of family objects, she uncovered a rich wartime history in the collection of letters written by her great grandmother Edie Digby, whose husband and two sons were away fighting in World War One
4/21/2020 • 28 minutes, 35 seconds
Charlie Chaplin’s Funny Walk and Other Music Hall Mysteries
Journalist Fiona Gruber goes on a very personal journey in the footsteps of her great grandfather, Victorian music hall comedian Walter Groves, to uncover his career and his hidden link with the greatest comedian of them all, Charlie Chaplin.
4/14/2020 • 28 minutes, 36 seconds
Tupaia, star navigator
In 1768 when James Cook sailed from Tahiti looking for the great southern land, Tupaia, a traditional Polynesia navigator was on board.
His knowledge proved invaluable to Cook and his sailing skills astounded the crew. What role did Tupaia actually play in the voyage and why haven't we heard heard about him?
4/7/2020 • 28 minutes, 35 seconds
The sands of Ooldea — Part 4 Wankani
The story of how the traditional custodians of Ooldea got their sacred water soak back and the healing of the land.
3/31/2020 • 28 minutes, 35 seconds
The sands of Ooldea — Part 3 Mamu
North west of Ooldea in South Australia's Great Victoria Desert is Maralinga where the British exploded seven nuclear bombs. This episode explores the Cold War politics behind the bomb tests and their ongoing impact on the traditional owners of the land, the Maralinga Tjarutja people.
3/24/2020 • 32 minutes, 16 seconds
The sands of Ooldea — Part 2 Kabbarli
Ooldea's most famous resident was Daisy Bates, also known as "Kabbarli" or grandmother. She lived at Ooldea for sixteen years in a tent, helping to feed and clothe Aboriginal people, but these days her reputation is very mixed.
3/17/2020 • 42 minutes, 6 seconds
The sands of Ooldea — Part 1 Yuldi
On the edge of the Nullabor, Ooldea, with its ancient water soak "Yuldi Kapi", is one of the most important Aboriginal sites in Australia. Trading routes and dreaming stories crossed here for thousands of years, but then the transnational railway arrived in 1917.
3/10/2020 • 31 minutes, 35 seconds
Steely women
Forty years ago Australian women weren't fighting for equal pay, they were fighting for an equal right to work.
This is the story of our nation's biggest class action suit, instigated by a group of blue-collar women against the company known in those days as The Big Australian.
3/3/2020 • 28 minutes, 39 seconds
Heavenly and demonic: the story of the saxophone
Find out why, in its relatively short history, one instrument has offended ideologues, drawn the ire of dictators, and been put down, shunned and outlawed.
2/25/2020 • 28 minutes, 36 seconds
Dissent and disillusionment: Australians in East Germany
In part 2, we trace the growing discontent in East Germany in the 1980s. An Indigenous Australian rock band tours East Germany while anti-government protests are brewing, and just like the Berlin Wall, one person’s dedication to communism will come crashing down.
2/18/2020 • 29 minutes, 6 seconds
Friends and foes: Australians in East Germany
A Cold War tale of spies, diplomacy and secret police, from Indigenous communities in the Top End to the opera houses of Berlin.
2/11/2020 • 28 minutes, 35 seconds
Carving up the Country
Gamilaraay woman Marika Duczynski travels to the Gulf country of north west QLD, then across the Blue Mountains, to western NSW, looking for trees that have become symbols of our contested history, but also markers of a culture bound in deep time.
2/4/2020 • 28 minutes, 35 seconds
Stamp of war — the end of Yugoslavia
Three teenage girls — a Muslim, a Serb and a Croatian all from Bosnia Herzegovina, are drawn into one of the bloodiest conflicts in post war Europe. 30 years later they find their voice.
1/28/2020 • 28 minutes, 35 seconds
Guide Alice
Gifted naturalist, ground-breaking photographer and early feminist figure. Guide Alice was Mount Buffalo's most sought after mountain guide.
1/21/2020 • 29 minutes, 10 seconds
Mother danced with Göring
A glimpse into the 1930's and 40's through the fragments that remain of one woman's story – socialite, swordswoman, actress and the first woman to read the ABC national news.
1/14/2020 • 28 minutes, 35 seconds
Cooking for assimilation
The discovery of an old recipe book of her Hungarian grandmother's sets Ruth Balint on a family investigation. Between the pages, she uncovers more than just the instructions for her beloved margosh beigli.
1/7/2020 • 28 minutes, 35 seconds
Amazon Acres — girls' own adventure
A women-only utopia deep in the Australian bush — no men, no meat, no machines. It was a wild ride, complete with rainbows and tiger snakes, sisterly joy and un-sisterly tensions.
12/31/2019 • 28 minutes, 35 seconds
Escape from Iran
Shortly after the 1979 Iranian Revolution, a young Bahai mother was smuggled out of the country on camelback with her baby daughter.
40 years later she recounts her story.
12/24/2019 • 28 minutes, 35 seconds
Blue Lake – finding Dudley Flats
On the western edge of central Melbourne lies a blind spot: the now industrialised zone was once home to the shanty town called Dudley Flats. Writer David Sornig has been walking the area re-imagining its residents.
12/17/2019 • 28 minutes, 36 seconds
Who Killed the Kangaroo King?
Andy Komarnicki disappeared without a trace from the south west Queensland town of St George in January 1980. What happened to him?
12/10/2019 • 28 minutes, 35 seconds
Dreams of New Mexico - in the footprints of Georgia O’Keeffe
American artist Georgia O’Keeffe (1887-1986) is an icon, much loved today for her un-conformist spirit and beauty, as much as for her paintings of sensual flowers.
12/3/2019 • 30 minutes, 20 seconds
The brazen women of silent film
The lives of women at the turn of the 20th century were bound by strict social conventions and rules. These Australian stars of silent film defied most of them.
11/26/2019 • 37 minutes, 3 seconds
Port Essington, World's End
Dubbed “World’s End” by its inhabitants, Port Essington in western Arnhem Land was the third failed attempt by the British to settle northern Australia. The settlement lasted 11 years, from 1838 to 1849, and sparked an intriguing cultural exchange between the British settlers and the local Indigenous people.
11/19/2019 • 28 minutes, 35 seconds
The great air race
The amazing story of the 1919 pioneering air race from England to Australia.
11/12/2019 • 28 minutes, 35 seconds
Two stories that weave together war, food and the power of memory
During War time food shortages and rationing preoccupied most people, but the hunger suffered by prisoners was on a whole different level.
11/5/2019 • 28 minutes, 35 seconds
War recipes
During War time food shortages and rationing preoccupied most people - but the hunger suffered by the prisoners of War was on a whole different level.
11/5/2019 • 28 minutes, 35 seconds
The Bomb Lobby
In the late 1960s, at the height of the Cold War, Australia made a brief but audacious bid to enter the nuclear arms race, by manufacturing a bomb
10/29/2019 • 28 minutes, 35 seconds
Claremont: the murders that rocked Perth
Every era, every city has a crime that defines it. For Perth it was the Claremont serial killings.
10/22/2019 • 39 minutes, 8 seconds
Inside the Big day Out: flying too close to the sun
Come on a wild ride through the extraordinary story of the Big Day Out; the festival which, for over two decades, was a summertime rite of passage for music lovers around Australia. Was it really a victim of its' own success?
10/15/2019 • 31 minutes
Inside the Big Day Out: from Nirvana to nightmare
Come on a wild ride through the extraordinary story of the Big Day Out; the festival which, for over two decades, was a summertime rite of passage for music lovers around Australia
10/8/2019 • 32 minutes, 30 seconds
Experiment street — the true history of a city lane
It's the early 1900's in Sydney. Fictional Pyrmont resident and neighbourhood gossip Lizzie Absalom tells what really went on in those back lanes.
10/1/2019 • 28 minutes, 35 seconds
Who was Jimmy Possum?
There’s a mystery surrounding the elegant and ingenious Jimmy Possum chairs that were made 130 years ago in Tasmania. Did their maker live in a tree trunk? Did he even exist? Claudia Taranto goes in search of the real Jimmy Possum and learns about the enduring power of a good story.
9/24/2019 • 32 minutes, 22 seconds
The Compound — trapped in a UN safehaven
Three Western journalists and a UN employee ignored advice to leave East Timor after the country's independence vote in 1999. They recount the most fearful week of their lives.
9/17/2019 • 28 minutes, 36 seconds
Through Samurai Eyes: solving the mystery surrounding one of Australia's great convict escape stories
When amateur historian Nick Russell stumbled across a set of very old Japanese manuscripts, he unearthed a dramatic tale of convict mutineers, samurai warriors and a hijacked ship, which sheds new light on one of the greatest escape stories in Australian history.
9/10/2019 • 28 minutes, 36 seconds
Through Samurai eyes: shedding new light on Australia's greatest convict escape story
A dramatic tale featuring pirates, Samurai warriors, a historical detective and a ship of escaped convicts from Australia who washed up in Japan in 1830
9/3/2019 • 28 minutes, 36 seconds
Secrets of the Mallacoota Bunker
An idyllic town with a hidden surveillance bunker and a secret past. A ruined RAAF base comes to life to tell its story.
8/27/2019 • 28 minutes, 36 seconds
Tales from the Nuyts Archipelago
In these remote islands we uncover a history of whalers, abducted Aboriginal women, and a mysterious human skeleton found on Franklin Island. There’s even a connection to Gulliver’s Travels.
8/20/2019 • 32 minutes, 36 seconds
Narjong means fresh water
Aboriginal people from the Murray-Darling Basin’s waterways come together to raise awareness and speak up for their country.
8/13/2019 • 28 minutes, 36 seconds
Amazon Acres — Sisterhood under siege
When a group of newcomers set up a women-only community in the bush, the neighbours were scandalised. It wasn't long before hostility turned into drastic action. Could the community survive?
8/6/2019 • 28 minutes, 36 seconds
Amazon Acres — Girls' own adventure
A women-only utopia deep in the Australian bush — no men, no meat, no machines — was a wild ride, complete with rainbows and tiger snakes, sisterly joy and un-sisterly tensions.
7/30/2019 • 28 minutes, 36 seconds
Something in the water — the bitter struggle over fluoride in Australia
Anonymous threats in the mail and a homemade bomb. International networks of misinformation. A young girl with the gift of song. Three stories that share a common thread: water fluoridation.
7/23/2019 • 28 minutes, 36 seconds
The Wardian Case - the box that changed the world
Have you ever wondered where the plants in your garden originally came from? They were probably transported in a Wardian case. Discover the story of this remarkable object, whose lasting impact on the natural world remains evident today.
7/16/2019 • 28 minutes, 46 seconds
Queensland’s Native Police – grappling with the gaps
The Queensland Native Police had a devastating impact on Indigenous people across the state. We look at how Indigenous families deal with the unknowns in their family history – unknowns caused by the violence of the Native Police.
7/9/2019 • 28 minutes, 36 seconds
Queensland’s Native Police – the frontier in my family
Queensland’s Native Police was notorious for its violence against Indigenous people on the colonial frontier. How do descendants of Aboriginal troopers in the Native Police, and descendants of massacre survivors, make sense of this history?
7/2/2019 • 28 minutes, 36 seconds
The blue man was black: Hans Jonathan's slave saga
In the early 1800s, on the remote East coast of Iceland in a small fishing village, a young man stepped ashore. He was escapee from the Danish slave trade and is said to be Iceland’s first black settler.
6/25/2019 • 28 minutes, 57 seconds
The War We Forgot
How does a nation forget a wartime catastrophe? When Japan invaded Australian territory in January 1942, hundreds of civilians were left behind to die. Nearly 80 years later, their families are still traumatised.
6/18/2019 • 28 minutes, 35 seconds
The surprising story of Wong Shee Ping
The discovery of the first Chinese story written in Australia gives a fascinating and new insight into the early Chinese immigrants of Victoria. The anonymous author is also uncovered, and revealed to his Australian grandchildren..
6/11/2019 • 28 minutes, 35 seconds
Last Light: the Valentich Mystery
A young pilot. A distress call. A missing plane. What happened to Frederick Valentich in October 1978?
6/4/2019 • 28 minutes, 35 seconds
Waterloo Bay: that word "massacre"
What happens when a small town puts the word "massacre" on an historical monument?
5/28/2019 • 30 minutes, 58 seconds
Escape from Iran
Shortly after the 1979 Iranian Revolution, a young Bahai mother was smuggled out of the country on camelback with her baby daughter.
40 years later she recounts her story.
5/21/2019 • 28 minutes, 35 seconds
The unauthorised history of the sausage sizzle
The ritual of the sausage sizzle soaks deep into the Australian identity. This is the unlikely true story of an Aussie battler that became a hero in the mouths of millions.
5/14/2019 • 28 minutes, 35 seconds
The air of heaven - Australian women jockeys
When Michelle Payne won the Melbourne Cup in 2015 there were three female jockeys who were with her in spirit. They all challenged the male-dominated racing industry, pushed on by the air of heaven.
5/7/2019 • 28 minutes, 27 seconds
A short history of political advertising
As the federal election machine goes into full swing, putting the art of persuasion to the test, a timely look back at one of Australia’s most significant political advertising campaigns.
4/30/2019 • 28 minutes, 36 seconds
Forgotten men of a forgotten war
What would it take to bring home the 43 Australian servicemen still missing from the Korean War?
4/23/2019 • 28 minutes, 35 seconds
Mother danced with Göring
A glimpse into the 1930's and 40's through the fragments that remain of one woman's story – socialite, swordswoman, actress and the first woman to read the ABC national news.
4/16/2019 • 28 minutes, 35 seconds
Blue Lake – Finding Dudley Flats
On the western edge of central Melbourne lies a blind spot: the now industrialised zone was once home to the shanty town called Dudley Flats. Writer David Sornig has been walking the area re-imagining its residents.
4/9/2019 • 30 minutes, 35 seconds
The Bauhaus - a school, a movement, an idea
To mark the centenary of the Bauhaus, a trip back to Weimar Germany to explore the story and legacy of the movement
4/2/2019 • 31 minutes, 21 seconds
Cooking for assimilation
The discovery of an old recipe book of her Hungarian grandmother's sets Ruth Balint on a family investigation. Between the pages, she uncovers more than just the instructions for her beloved margosh beigli.
3/26/2019 • 28 minutes, 36 seconds
Punky Reggae Party
In 1970s London two unlikely parties united in a unique cultural exchange. Rastafarians and punks joined forces, creating new sounds and new friendships.
3/19/2019 • 28 minutes, 36 seconds
Driven: the 1968 London to Sydney Marathon
In 1968 the longest, hardest and richest motor race set off from London bound for Sydney.
3/12/2019 • 28 minutes, 35 seconds
The strange fate of Charles Darwin's ship The Beagle
Whatever happened to Charles Darwin's famous ship HMS Beagle? A tale of of sleuthing, smugglers, and barrels of rum, set on the Essex coast in England
3/5/2019 • 28 minutes, 36 seconds
Shooting the Past - The Glide
An arresting photograph has Clare Wright duck-diving into the history of surfing in Australia.
2/26/2019 • 30 minutes, 13 seconds
Shooting the Past — Roughy Justice
A fishy looking photograph throws Clare Wright into the deep end of the battle between industry and sustainability.
2/19/2019 • 28 minutes, 35 seconds
Shooting the Past - Alien Nation
Clare Wright explores the history behind a studio portrait of an Edwardian family, which raises some tricky questions about citizenship, the Australian constitution and the subtle art of belonging.
2/12/2019 • 28 minutes, 35 seconds
All Tragic to the Moon
Clare Wright unravels the dramatic story within a family photograph that takes us to the searing heart of an Australian summer tragedy: bushfire.
2/5/2019 • 28 minutes, 44 seconds
Shooting the Past — Camp Sovereignty
A photograph of two men — one Indigenous and one non-Indigenous — holding hands, leads Clare Wright to investigate the history of Aboriginal resistance in Australia.