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Shed a Tear for the Norman Mailers
Such a lazy conspiratorial bent towards Australian publishing camouflages what I and many of my colleagues believe is an important debate we should be having about barriers to entry and supporting local writing.
The Fate of Bad Feminists
It took Dunham eight-and-a-half years to write her follow-up—and it shows. With the benefit of hindsight and time away from the bright spotlight that swallowed Dunham during her Girls years, she writes about that time in her life with a clarity, self-awareness and bittersweet wit.
Dear Gabrielle
Frankness comes before fiction in Debra Adelaide’s homage to her late friend in When I’m Sixty-Four.
The Cult of Solvej Balle
In our fast-paced attention economy, how did On the Calculation of Volume, a ruminative series about a woman living the same day on repeat, become an international bestseller?
The Tradwife Novel for the Chronically Online
Caro Claire Burke’s viral Yesteryear picks apart the MAGA-coded return to ‘traditional values’ with varying success.
Finding the Funny in AI
It was only going to be a matter of time before AI wormed its way out of the historic confines of science fiction and into the realm of the social realist novel.
Fiction’s Hungry Women
Eating without inhibition and refusing to eat at all may seem like opposites, but in fiction they can function in the similar ways: both destabilise systems that seek to discipline the female body.
Does Publishing Have an Age Problem?
‘A writer in midlife can have more steel, more tenacity and be more compelled to take risks because there’s nothing to lose.’
Goth Ick
‘Is Wuthering Heights amoral?’ asked the London Review of Books podcast late last year. Of course, and deliberately so, we evidently needed reminding.
The Slow Cancellation of Lolita
In the follow-up to her internationally bestselling memoir, Jennette McCurdy takes the readers on a squeamish journey of teenage lust in an inegalitarian world.
Slug Theory
Human creativity sets itself apart from AI slop in this playful comic-essay hybrid on artmaking—the runner-up of the KYD Creative Non-Fiction Prize 2025.
Burned by the Hot Take
The social media melee is hurting leftist organising, leaving us attacking each other rather than working together.
The Haunted Workplace
A recent wave of fiction about the corporate world draws on the gothic and the weird to expose the failed promises of modern life.
The Dark Side of Academia
RF Kuang’s blockbuster Katabasis is a reminder that the modern university sector is something of a hellscape—but it doesn’t have to be this way.
In Defence of Easy Reading
For a long time, I felt like the books I consumed needed to be worthy. Seeking pleasure instead has reminded me why I fell in love with words in the first place.
Publishers Need to Take Fantasy Seriously
As a senior book editor and a reformed lit snob, I’ve watched the rise of the romantasy with interest. Beyond sex and dragons, the revitalisation of genre fiction has hidden potential.
Why Literary Fiction Isn’t in the Mood for Love
Once upon a time, the marriage plot served the inevitable happy ending. What happens when the institution—and with it, the tidy narrative—slips out of fashion?
The Angel in the House
An experienced senior editor explores the dire state of the publishing industry.
I Don’t Want to Die with a Smartphone in My Hand
An iPhone detox didn’t make me more productive, but I did feel free. I don’t want to wake up one day and realise that my most devoted relationship has been with a screen.
Spotify is Worse Than You Think
A subscription to the world’s most popular streaming service comes with artist exploitation, pseudoscience and the funnelling of profits into the war machine.
Murder of the Dancefloor
Nightclubs were a crucial part of my queer millennial coming-of-age. Current trends show a global decline in nightclubs, but is Gen Z really to blame?
Beyond the Takedown
I came close to writing a hatchet job once, and I was confused by how popular the piece became online. Criticism should offer more than a cut-throat execution.
Magazines are Dead, Long Live Magazines
Carving out a sustainable career as a freelance writer requires incredible tenacity, but as a recent memoir shows, it wasn’t always this hard.
The Importance of Being Earnest
Thomas Vowles’s Our New Gods offers a sentimental queer coming-of-age story in wolf’s clothing.
Why I Killed My First Novel
My manuscript won a big prize and increased the pressure for literary success. But I had to put it—and me—out of its misery.
Australia’s Literary Impostor Syndrome
In the absence of a thriving avant-garde, Dominic Amerena’s I Want Everything adds to the local tradition of imagined alternative histories.
The Future is Fungi
I quit my smartphone and became attuned to a ‘wood-wide web’ under threat.
Future of the Fair Go
Will Albanese’s astonishing election victory mean Labor will finally address wealth inequality in Australia?
The Passenger Seat
Male friendship becomes violent on the road in Vijay Khurana’s debut novel.
To Puff or Not to Puff
Do away with blurbs? I don’t think so.
Meet Paraphase Journal
Man Feelings
Misogyny is flourishing. What do emotions have to do with it?
Bringing Back The Book Club
At turns entertaining and bemusing, rewatching ABC TV’s book show highlights a scarcity of televised arts criticism.
An Onslaught of Light
Natasha Rai’s queer coming-of-age story provides a fresh, heartfelt take on the migrant narrative.
The Aggressive Commodification of Cosy Asian Fiction
The Winter Moon Says Fight
Ma protect me. As I try to get back to you.
Who Stands with the Arts?
Creative Australia’s troubling act of censorship signals an authoritarian turn we can’t ignore.
My Father Was a Bushranger
Like a stockwhip, Blak realities crack through the fictions of Australia’s colonial identity.
Gutsy Girls
Josie McSkimming’s memoir illuminates the life of her famous sister, Dorothy Porter.
Precious Banter
A recent dating trend reveals what’s missing in modern romance.
Painfully Fragmented
Is it possible to balance a creative life with a day job?
Weight Loss Drugs and the End of Desire
How off-brand Ozempic led me into a state of pharmacological nirvana.
Sign o’ the Times
History fades in Sean Reynolds’ photographic collection Melbourne Ghost Signs.
Buried Secrets Down the Rabbit Hole
Shaeden Berry’s debut novel digs deep into a community to find hidden truths.
No Courage in Concussions
I learned the hard way that more needs to be done to prevent AFL head injuries.
Confessions of a Letterboxd Critic
Memoir Showcase: As a professional film reviewer, my amateur writing can feel like a dirty secret.
Clothes and Cultural Closeness
My fashion writing is fuelled by a passion for ethical clothing but also a family legacy that has sustainability at its heart.
Transcendent Translations
Jumaana Abdu’s startling debut novel doesn’t explain Islam but explores its depths.
Ears with Feet
An encounter with Tori Amos placed Jack Colwell firmly among the super fans.
Colonial Malaise
Critics Campus 2024: Alice Bellette unpacks Andy Burkitt’s horror comedy, The Organist.
Ripples of Words
Critics Campus 2024: Isabella Gullifer-Laurie speaks to Audrey Lam about her library-set experimental feature, Us and the Night.
Shimmering Trans Temporalities
Critics Campus 2024: Dylan Rowen on Jane Schoenbrun’s horror-infused I Saw the TV Glow.
Malu, Four Ways
Critics Campus 2024: Four perspectives on Pedro Freire’s resonant portrait Malu
Sweet Dreams, Four Ways
Critics Campus 2024: Four perspectives on Ena Sendijarević’s acidic satire Sweet Dreams
Melbourne Scheherazade
In an expansive polyphonic reminiscent of Zadie Smith and Tash Aw, Raeden Richardson’s debut novel captures the city’s essence through its outcasts.
Desire Under Capitalism
Sally Rooney’s much-anticipated fourth novel, Intermezzo, looks for a way out of the structures that bind us from within.
No Language, No People
Growing up, my Wiradjuri heritage lingered in the background, just out of reach. Writing my first novel helped me connect to my ancestors, culture and language.
This Must Be the (Third) Place
The cost-of-living crisis and the loneliness epidemic collide as Australians are increasingly priced out of a seat at their local watering hole.
Teenage Diasporic Pangs in Jade and Emerald
A mother-daughter bond is tested in Michelle See-Tho’s exploration of the idiosyncracies of being a Chinese-Malaysian girl growing up in late-90s Australia.
The Queer Art of Sitting
From the Archive: It’s a simple, humorous meme—queer people can’t sit properly. But queer representations in film and television suggest something more radical.
Cowboy Phase
A yearning for offline living and communion with nature explains the enduring appeal of the cowboy in the modern age.
Everything Writers Need to Know About Legal Deposit
Psychedelic Australia in Big Time
Jordan Prosser’s debut novel offers mind-bending visions of the future. But beneath its rock’n’roll exterior lies a satire of contemporary Australian conservatism.
Homesick for Another Internet
Early web aesthetics are trending. But beyond comforting kitsch, retromania exposes today’s cultural stagnation and the limitations of surveillance capitalism.
Mixed Identities and Fragile Creatures
Heartbreak and tragedy mark Khin Myint’s searing memoir. Underpinning grief and a sense of dislocation is a lifetime of marginalisation as a mixed-race Australian.
No Place like Home
Housing insecurity has been a theme of Australian cinema for decades. Comparing a cult classic with a comedic new release reveals the stark reality of the current rental crisis.
This is Not Hyperbole
Cher Tan’s essay collection Peripathetic resists the clichés of internet writing by leaning into the propulsive and boundary-crossing nature of the digital, the literary and IRL.
The Addictive Appeal of Pop-Culture Conspiracies
Speculation has become enticing entertainment in the attention economy. From the dark corners of QAnon to Taylor Swift’s Easter eggs, even the most innocuous theories have the potential to radicalise.
Alexis Wright on Winning the 2024 Stella Prize!
Facing Facts
Non-fiction books require intensive fact-checking. But in an industry without the same code of conduct as media journalism, accuracy and veracity hinges on trust between publishers and their authors—with occasional perilous consequences.
Friendship and Sexual Awakening in Lead Us Not
Abbey Lay’s debut novel joins a rich canon of literature that explores the complexity of intimacy between young women. The exhilirating possibilities of adolescence buzz through this suburban-set Australian coming-of-age story.
Girlboss, Interrupted
Bri Lee is a rare Australian literary multihyphenate: bestselling author, public intellectual, activist and social media influencer. Given her knack for brand building, her debut novel offers a self-aware yet lukewarm parody of the uneasy relationship between art and money.
Literary Festivals in the Time of War Crimes
As the death toll in Gaza continues to mount, the arts world has started to fracture along sectarian lines. Recent attempts to censor events programming reveal the way that money, politics and power increasingly intervene in our national culture.
Speculative Futures in Always Will Be
Blak sovereignty is centred in Mykaela Saunders’ inventive new short story collection. Her experiments in form, philosophy and genre offer a visionary exploration of the Tweed Goori community to which she belongs.
Breaking Open Mental Illness Narratives
To examine one’s mental health in literature is to do the difficult work of overcoming shame and transforming the ineffable into words. Two new releases break form to share personal stories that hold room for ambiguities of the mind.
The Birth of Amplify Bookstore
The events of 2020 gave rise to anti-racist reading lists that transformed publishing. Not satisfied with a waning ‘trend’, I teamed up with a friend to establish a bookshop that platforms stories by racially diverse authors.
Shadow Lives in My Brilliant Sister
Amy Brown’s debut offers an original literary triptych that pushes beyond the mythology of Miles Franklin. This exceptional novel interrogates what it means for women to accept or reject a conventional life.
Festival Files: EWF
Adult Swimmer
For migrants to Australia, the beach can feel like an unsafe or unwelcoming place. But learning to swim later in life teaches lessons in capability, survival and community.
Chekhov’s Gun in Women & Children
Master storyteller Tony Birch pushes the use of extraneous detail to new limits in his latest exploration of the lives of the working class.
Summer Picks
Short Fiction Q&As!
Where’s the Proof?
There’s something exciting about coming across an advanced reading copy of a book—these imperfect and sometimes highly covetable unproofed editions are a testament to human labour behind literature.
Books Reviews: Tell Her She’s Dreamin’, Stone Yard Devotional, Strangely Enough
Tell Her She’s Dreamin’, Stone Yard Devotional, Strangely Enough
Press For Humanity
Book Reviews: Prima Facie, Edenglassie, I Don’t
Prima Facie, Edenglassie, Good Material
Slipping Away
‘I knew in that moment, although not consciously, that you would always be there for me, that you would put my needs over your own, and that I could always, always rely on you. I can only hope to do the same for you now.’
Unholy Anorexia
In medieval times, saints starved themselves in a quest for piety. These girls’ tragic craving for something beyond their earthly selves illuminates the painful disembodied distortions that can motivate disordered eating.
Never Again
As a genocide unfolds in Gaza, I’ve thought more about being Jewish than ever before in my life. Never have I felt more connected to my Judaism or more ashamed of the government of the country that claims to represent me.
How The Fraud Unpicks the Victorian Novel
New Critic: Zadie Smith’s latest book satirises 19th-century British history and literature to skewer nostalgia and highlight national delusions about race and imperialism.
Book Reviews: The Modern, Premonition, Gunflower
The Modern, Premonition, Gunflower
Impossible Immersion
In a search to understand the hero of my novel, a much-maligned historical figure of a medieval saga, I travelled to Iceland. As I wandered through the landscapes of her life, I faced the limits of what it means to inhabit the point of view of a character.
Uncanny Motherhood in Born for You
Magdalena McGuire plumbs the surreal and the mundane in her debut short story collection on the peculiar nature of maternal caregiving.
Book Reviews: Four Dogs Missing, Firelight, Something Bad is Going to Happen
Four Dogs Missing, Firelight, Something Bad is Going to Happen
Revelation
Trepanation is a procedure both ancient and mystifying. Combing through history, my fascination with this extreme practice leads me to the limits of what it means to know.
The Urgency of Songs for the Dead and the Living
New Critic: Amid the ongoing dispossession of the Palestinian people, Sara M Saleh’s multigenerational saga melds fiction and activism in haste to illuminate the diasporic condition.
Say Goodbye to the Sad Girl
From The Bell Jar to Bella Hadid, the ‘sad girl’ is a potent symbol of feminine suffering. But just as the trope reaches its pinnacle in pop culture, its icons have begun to abandon it, making way for more multi-dimensional understandings of womanhood.
Spectacle of Intimacy
Maryam Tafakory’s Mast-del and Rajee Samarasinghe’s Lotus-Eyed Girl
Carnal Cravings
Claire Denis’ Trouble Every Day
Time Bomb Y2K, Four Ways
Four perspectives on Marley McDonald and Brian Becker’s debut documentary Time Bomb Y2K
Not Showing, Not Telling
In an age of hypervisibility and surveillance, the confessional mode has been trending. While opacity may seem counterintuitive in the quest for authentic representations, art that embraces the unknown can offer nuanced understandings of the world.
Book Reviews: A Real Piece of Work, Serengotti, Pink Slime
A Real Piece of Work, Serengotti, Pink Slime
Think an Empty Room, Moonly with Phone Glow
In the winner of the KYD Creative Non-Fiction Prize 2023, life seems a blurred line of consequences.
Finding Ourselves in Formula
Genre fiction is often looked down upon for its adherence to established plot beats. But as a fantasy writer, I celebrate these ‘predictable’ narrative structures because they are powerful modes to explore—and reshape—our understanding of the world.
The Invisible Woman in Wifedom
New Critic: Award-winning writer Anna Funder inserts her own story into that of the overlooked literary wife. Yet in a book ostensibly concerned with patriarchy and gendered labour, how much—perhaps intentionally—is left out?
Book Reviews: Roseghetto, The Scope of Permissibility, Audition
Roseghetto, The Scope of Permissibility, Audition
Capitalism and the Campus Novel
New Critic: Brandon Taylor returns to a university setting in The Late Americans, putting society under a microscope in this subversive exploration of class, race and sex.
Making Peace with My Inner Editor
As an editor, my role is to look over every word with a discerning and scrupulous eye. As a writer, it’s hard to switch the critical mind off.
Reclaiming Indigeneity in the Modern Colony
I’ve connected with my Elders and learned my culture using digital technologies. People often see social media as an inauthentic way to gain community and knowledge, but the internet has a place in the reclamation and continuation of First Nations traditions.
Publishing’s Catch 22 on ‘Timely’ and ‘Important’ Books
As an aspiring fiction author, I’ve been warned that readers are showing ‘apocalypse fatigue’. As world events blur the lines between realism and what was once the realm of speculative fiction, why aren’t the big issues of our times the ‘next big thing’ in publishing?
Book Reviews: After the Rain, Yellowface, Eta Draconis
After the Rain, Yellowface, Eta Draconis
Writing People You Know
When my memoir was published, I faced the reality that my perspective wasn’t the only truth. Writing about others raises complex ethical questions, but we must first consider the inherent asymmetry of power when we capture our version of events on the page.
Getting Cosy at the End of the World
During lockdown, I spent countless hours ‘cosy’ gaming. I’ve become a big fan of the recent trend of video games, books and digital media that provide gentle escapism, but there’s something dystopian about this increasingly popular genre.
Secret Pain, Hidden Relief
For a long time, I suffered from debilitating pain caused by endometriosis and other reproductive health issues. In the lead-up to my hysterectomy, I mourned that pop culture has so few representations of the physical realities experienced by so many.
Succession and the Disenchantment of the American Dream
In a growing trend of ‘eat the rich’ narratives, the hit HBO television show places the media elite under scrutiny. This family saga of Shakespearean proportions, where even the winners are losers, exposes the underbelly of U.S. exceptionalism.
Love and War in The World and All That It Holds
New Critic: In Aleksandar Hemon’s masterful novel, two men meet amid the brutality of WWI. Forgotten victims are brought into focus in this epic saga about connection amid displacement.
Weird is In
Australian fiction has long been dominated by the realist novel. A new wave of writers continue the avant-garde tradition—but are experimental and offbeat stories always destined to be relegated to a literary niche?
New Critic: The Haunting of Palestine in Enter Ghost
New Critic: In Isabella Hammad’s second novel, a West Bank theatre group stages Shakespeare’s Hamlet. The personal and political intertwine in this exploration of the possibilities and limits of art under occupation.
Book Reviews: The Albatross, Anam, Greek Lessons
The Albatross, Anam, Greek Lessons
Books v. Everything
In a 1946 essay, George Orwell compared reading to other forms of recreation. Today, with so much competing for our money, attention and time, it bears re-asking—are books still one of the cheapest pleasures?
Embodied Motherhood in Little Plum
When reading books on motherhood, it’s difficult not to connect them to your own experiences. Laura McPhee-Browne’s Little Plum demonstrates the power of fiction to slice open the quotidian to reveal the viscera of what it means to bear children.
Hypermasculinity and the Stoic Industrial Complex
Stoicism has had a popular revival thanks to the practical guidance it offers on how to withstand adversity. Yet out of the ashes of ancient philosophers has emerged a new kind of self-help influencer who sells outdated masculine ideals.
The Last of Us and the Radical Possibilities of Eco-Horror
Can fear be ecologically productive? Hit TV series The Last of Us capitalises off ecophobia with its fungus-zombie plot line, but the most affective genre narratives often reveal the uncanny truth that nature is not some antagonist outside us.
Book Reviews: Fed to Red Birds, This is Not Miami, The Anniversary
Fed to Red Birds, This is Not Miami, The Anniversary
A Portrait of the Artist as a Neural Network
While the arrival of ChatGPT will see us inundated with low-creativity work, human expression remains as vital as ever.
The Promising Return of the Australian Teen Onscreen
Despite the enduring popularity of coming-of-age stories, the Australian adolescent experience was largely absent in the film and TV that I watched growing up. Recent film 6 Festivals heralds a new wave of refreshing content that satisfies a thirst for accurate and relatable local stories.
Daisy Jones and Hollywood’s Fictional Band Problem
The onscreen adaptation of Daisy Jones & The Six faced an uphill battle—the reader had been free to imagine the greatest arrangements ever recorded. Films and TV shows about bands have a unique, and almost impossible, challenge to sell songs invented for screen as global chart-topping hits.
Setting and the Subtleties of Perspective
A writing exercise got me thinking about the difference between seeing and remembering. External and internal worlds merge when we establish setting, and what is conveyed can have less to do with reality and more to do with the stance of the observer.
This Place Is Fake
From digital mapping to location tagging, our perception of our bodies in physical space has become increasingly filtered through technology. But every knowledge system has gaps and ghosts—what does the impulse to chart our lives online teach us not to notice?
New Critic: Disconnection and Dislocation in Once a Stranger
New Critic: Exploring the complex negotiations between migrant parents and their diaspora children, Zoya Patel’s first novel is a bold move against the conservative impetus toward familial unity at all costs, and a frank acknowledgement that often there is no easy reconciliation of cultural perspectives.
Music Just Ain’t No Good
It’s widely accepted that Spotify is ruining music culture—but as persuasive as these arguments are, I can’t deny the joy I feel at having a world of music available on tap. Is it possible to love an art form to death?
Book Reviews: Smashing Serendipity, Funny Ethnics, Birnam Wood
Smashing Serendipity, Funny Ethnics, Birnam Wood
Trans Histories and the Legacy of Jack Jorgensen
In a moment of growing backlash towards the transgender community, I’ve been drawn to the history books. The story of a Victorian man whose death in 1893 became a sensationalised headline reminds us that gender non-conforming people have always been here.
Social Media Voyeurism and the Allure of the Mundane
There’s something hypnotic about watching the routine activities of other people’s lives. But on platforms such as TikTok, authenticity and consumerism make for an uneasy mix when ‘real life’ is packaged into addictive bites.
Book Reviews: Crows Nest, Dazzling, The God of No Good
Crows Nest, Dazzling, The God of No Good
Unmasking Female Autistic Representation on TV
Everything’s Gonna Be Okay and Heartbreak High are the first shows to feature openly autistic female leads played by autistic actresses. Watching these performances shattered my perceptions of what autism looks like and helped me understand my own experience.
A Good Ending Is Only The Beginning
For writers and readers, the end of a story is not just a summing up or a happily-ever-after—it’s the resolution of an unspoken promise you make at the start of your shared journey.
What BTS’ Military Service Tells Us About Soft Power
The K-pop superstars shocked fans when they put their juggernaut success on hold to enlist in the army.
Entering the Publishing World in a Culturally Safe Space
Through a dedicated program for First Nations writers and editors, I was given the tools—the words—to explain why I looked for myself in stories in which there were no black girls.
Hungry Little DisHuman Beings
The winner of the inaugural KYD Creative Non-fiction Prize explores the radical potential of an autistic affinity with the almost-human-but-not-quite.
How the TV Workplace Turned Sour
Some of this year’s best television captures a fundamental change in our attitudes to work. The comedy is darker, the drama is more caustic and close-knit office dynamics are losing their sheen, as creators shift their focus from absurdity to alienation.
Love, Death and Sacrifice in Train to Busan
A war film disguised as a zombie movie, Yeon Sang-ho’s K-horror classic asks whether we can choose how we die—and therefore what we choose to live for.
Polyphony and the Internet Novel
Literary fiction about the internet still tends to centre a singular narrator experiencing strangers through their online presence. How might writers dissolve this centralised voice and embrace the messy cacophony of the internet?
What Book Exchanges Tell Us About Travel Narrative
A staple of tourism hot spots, book exchanges remain largely populated by Western memoirs of hedonism and adventure. A new wave of narratives resist the urge to exoticise, approaching travel as something less performative and more introspective.
Penguin Random House, Simon & Schuster and the Ecologies of Publishing
The now-blocked merger, which would have seen a publishing behemoth become even larger, exposed some of the uncomfortable realities of a romanticised industry, and the very real gap between culture and commerce in the sector.
Lost in the Simulation
We’re All Going To The World’s Fair, Jane Schoenbrun’s claustrophobic creepypasta horror, captures what makes the internet soothing and terrifying and real and unreal all at once. Watching the film we experience all the discomfort and anxiety that arises when the lines between reality and simulation start to blur.
Book Reviews: Tell Me Again, Men I Trust, The Glass House, The Lovers
Tell Me Again, Men I Trust, The Glass House, The Lovers
Kevin Wilson on Strange Loops, Outsider Art and Worst-Case Scenarios
Conversation with the bestselling author of Now Is Not the Time to Panic
Writing the Inner Lives of Space Objects
How do we imagine the inner lives of inanimate objects? Fascinated by stories of objects sent into space, I began to use fictional, speculative and experimental modes of writing to look back at humanity and blur the lines between hard science and human emotion.
Book Advances Are a Gamble, Not a Prize
An advance from a publisher can sound like a windfall, but the reality is closer to a bet made on an artist’s commercial success—and for most authors, an unstable and unliveable form of income.
A Book That Changed Me: Siang Lu on Chris Flynn’s Mammoth
Book Reviews: blackbirds don’t mate with starlings, Nothing to Hide, Gemini Falls, Limberlost
blackbirds don’t mate with starlings, Nothing to Hide, Gemini Falls, Limberlost
Ruth Ozeki on Music, Multiverses and the Magic of Writing
Conversation with the award-winning author of The Book of Form and Emptiness
Bodies Bodies Bodies and the Curse of the Terminally Online
For a film whose action happens almost entirely offline, the internet is ever-present in Bodies Bodies Bodies. Halina Reijn’s horror comedy recognises that the internet’s hyper-awareness of genre tropes and packaged selves has become enmeshed in how we engage with those closest to us.
Writing, Painting and the Fluidity of Creative Practice
My visual arts and writing practices exist in a loop with inspiration running in both directions. What started as intimate, therapeutic processes have become empowering tools for advocacy and agency.
A Book That Changed Me: Jane Harper on Roald Dahl’s The Witches
What We Wear Out
Our clothes demarcate our private sphere from the public, whether we are standing out or blending in. From a reliance on everyday outfits to splashes of fabulousness, my own sense of style has evolved along with my identity.
Book Reviews: Legitimate Sexpectations, Against Disappearance, Hopeless Kingdom, This Devastating Fever
Legitimate Sexpectations, Against Disappearance, Hopeless Kingdom, This Devastating Fever
Your Money, My Problem: Halina Reijn’s Bodies Bodies Bodies
Halina Reijn’s Bodies Bodies Bodies
The Smaller Picture: Itsy Bits of Life in Marcel the Shell with Shoes On
Perspective, empathy and itsy bits of life in Marcel the Shell with Shoes On
Sissy, Four Ways
Four perspectives on Hannah Barlow and Kane Senes’ raucous Australian horror.
Country Rules Everything Around Me
Music has been a sovereign aspect of being for tens of thousands of years. As I recalibrate where and how to place my music, I am trying to prioritise spiritual wellness and affirm pathways for generations ahead to follow in.
Ling Ma on Bliss Montage, Fantasy and Absurdity
Unearthing Treasure Planet’s Buried Gold
Revisiting one of Disney’s biggest box-office bombs reveals a bold but flawed relic of the 2000s, in which the House of Mouse risked it all on something angsty, odd and experimental.
Book Reviews: Everything Feels Like the End of the World, Every Version of You, Motherlands, Train Lord
Everything Feels Like the End of the World, Every Version of You, Motherlands, Train Lord
A Book That Changed Me: Chris Womersley on A Dance to the Music of Time
Looking Back at Neighbours’ Cultural Legacy
One of Australia’s most successful and reliable media exports, the Ramsay Street soap had an outsize impact on the local arts industry both on and off screen.
Novelists Still Don’t Know How To Talk About The Internet
The most authentic literary depictions of online life today do not foreground the internet’s otherness, but recognise the minute and overt ways it envelops and informs our daily realities.
A New Way of Looking at Alibrandi
For playwright Vidya Rajan and director Stephen Nicolazzo, adapting Melina Marchetta’s beloved novel for the stage was an opportunity to explore new angles and themes.
Book Reviews: big beautiful female theory, Enclave, Holy Woman, Forty Nights
big beautiful female theory, Enclave, Holy Woman, Forty Nights
A Manifesto for the ‘Diverse’ Writer
As a multi-hyphenated emerging writer with literary aspirations, my identity is inextricable from my art. But representation as an artistic goal feels like too high a price on my soul.
Stranger Things Asks Us To Remember Something That Never Was
There’s something unsatisfying about the Netflix mega-hit’s treatment of the culture it claims to love. Its overt self-consciousness and warped nostalgia is representative of the rot infecting the entire streaming landscape.
Everything Everywhere All At Once Wants Us To Get Weird
In an era where the Hollywood machine has not looked kindly on hard-to-categorise titles, the success of the Daniels’ universe-hopping hit shows that audiences are ready to embrace the strange.
Book Reviews: The Eulogy, Homesickness, This All Come Back Now, Basin
The Eulogy, Homesickness, This All Come Back Now, Basin
Midnight Mass and the Evolution of the Horror Movie Priest
Priests have long been an adaptable entry point into narrative struggles between good and evil. As audiences grow more secular and sceptical of the church, filmmakers are increasingly leaning into the inherent conflicts and contradictions of the calling.
The Long Goodnight of the Bedtime TV Mascot
Part public service announcement, part brand mascot, costumed critters have been wishing regional Australia goodnight for decades. What was the purpose of this cheap-and-cheerful phenomenon, and has this watershed moment in local kitsch passed?
Searching for Subversion in the Summer of Scam
Con artists are enjoying an extended moment in the spotlight—but for a genre that delights in screwing over the rich, there’s surprisingly little resistance to capitalism itself. Is there a more subtle critique to be found in the art of the scam?
Cracking Open the Book Industry
A new program is helping me to pursue a career in publishing after years of trying to get a foot in the door. This opportunity gives me the chance to amplify voices that have been overlooked on the shelf, as well as behind the scenes.
How Kath & Kim Became Queer Canon
The queer community has embraced Kath & Kim because it highlights the absurdity of the ordinary. Growing up and coming to terms with my sexuality, its camp aesthetics showed me there was space in this world for a flamboyant kid like me.
What Video Games Taught Me About the End of the World
When an online video game I played in my teens announced it was shutting down, I witnessed an apocalypse play out in miniature—from anarchy and despair to small moments of generosity, community and even hope.
Book Reviews: How to Be Between, Root & Branch, Daisy & Woolf, Abomination
How to Be Between, Root & Branch, Daisy & Woolf, Abomination
How Neoliberalism Swallowed Arts Policy
In the wake of another disastrous budget, advocates for the arts sector remain trapped in the cursed logic of the free market economy. As an election approaches, we must not settle for crumbs but rethink what we value as a society.
Books Reviews: Hovering, Unlimited Futures, The Burnished Sun, The Writer Laid Bare
Hovering, Unlimited Futures, The Burnished Sun, The Writer Laid Bare
The Harmony and Hierarchies of a Girls’ Choir
Joining a girls’ choir gave me a sense of communion at a time when I felt like I didn’t belong. But despite the intoxicating sense of shared purpose, the choir was also a microcosm of Australian attitudes towards gender, race and disability.
An Apostate’s Case for Nature Writing
Years after losing my religion, I longed for a way to direct my worshipful heart without the old hierarchies. Turning to nature writing allowed me to connect spiritually with the natural world.
Book Reviews: Son of Sin, Sadvertising, Australiana, The Novel Project
Son of Sin, Sadvertising, Australiana, The Novel Project
Mamoru Hosoda’s Metaverse Dreams
The internet isn’t the utopia many originally envisioned—but for those who grew up online, cynical cautionary tales don’t reflect reality. Two anime films made a decade apart reflect our evolving ideas of virtual worlds, and hold out hope for connection within the chaos.
Two Rom-Coms, Five Perspectives
Highlights from the Melbourne Women in Film Festival Critics Lab
Diverse Publishing Isn’t Just About Writers
The Australian literary industry continues to lack First Nations and multicultural representation behind the scenes—an imbalance that can lead to inappropriate and often damaging editorial decisions and experiences.
The Lost Daughter and the Ambivalent Mother
Maggie Gyllenhaal’s directorial debut offers a restrained and compelling portrayal of an imperfect woman, and resists the societal impulse to definitively redeem or condemn women who complicate our ideas of motherhood.
Video Game Writing and a Protagonist You Don’t Control
For writers used to linear storytelling, writing for video games can seem like a daunting prospect—but it’s a crucial part of creating an immersive experience. When there are as many styles of play as there are players, how do you write for them all?
Book Reviews: The Cost of Labour, Cold Enough for Snow, Found, Wanting, The Torrent
The Cost of Labour, Cold Enough for Snow, Found, Wanting, The Torrent
How the Internet Made Me Rethink IRL Friendship
As social media blurs the line between real friendship and parasocial bonds, it’s easy to get caught up in new connections and communities. But knowing or being known by a lot of people is not the same as being understood.
KYD staff and contributors share their favourite culture of 2021
Staff and contributors share the culture we loved in 2021
My Brilliant Friend and I
Reading Ferrante’s novel for the first time, I was amazed at how much a story set in 1950s Naples echoed my own migrant upbringing in 1980s western Sydney.
How I Found Radical Accessibility in Video Games
Growing up with a physical disability, fast-paced gaming left me feeling stuck on the sidelines. But finding a subgenre focused on immersion and strategy allowed me to explore virtual worlds at my leisure.
Seeking Asylum: Hamed’s Story
Confessions of a Delusional Artist
In the arts, where dreams infinitely outnumber actual successes, self-delusion is called ‘believing in yourself’. As I navigate the challenges of working in the entertainment industry, denying reality feels like a necessity but also a curse.
Snobs, Bogans and Class in Australian Non‑fiction
Several recent books examine social mobility in Australia, but run into the same issues as broader discussions of class: a focus on dated signifiers like accents and taste, as opposed to the more complex realities of deepening economic inequality.
Book Reviews: Permafrost, Scary Monsters, Another Day in the Colony, How to End a Story
Permafrost, Scary Monsters, Another Day in the Colony, How to End a Story
Disoriental and the Dichotomies of Diaspora
Négar Djavadi’s novel reflects in its structure and style the often conflicting dualities that many immigrants experience: the pull between the life we know and the lives that might have been.
An Ode to Brendan Fraser and Body Neutrality
The archetypal 90s himbo, Brendan Fraser’s screen persona has changed and matured along with his body. In a culture obsessed with shredded superheroes, I’m taking solace in the body-neutral rhetoric surrounding his recent resurgence.
My Year of Being Younger
Starting my dream job in my thirties, I was insecure about being surrounded by people younger than me. Seeing an opportunity to rebrand, I took inspiration from TV and lied about my age.
Promising Young Writer
When I got a two-book deal at 25, I believed that my best work was still ahead of me. But authors only get one chance to be marketed as an ‘exciting new voice’—what happens when you’re no longer the next big thing?
How The L Word Continues to Celebrate Queer Identity
For a generation of queer women, The L Word provided much needed representation. The show’s reboot Generation Q speaks to the present moment while returning me to the warm embrace of a show that helped me accept my sexuality.
Could I Interest You in Everything, All of the Time?
By removing the gatekeepers to culture, the internet’s expansiveness presents a new challenge to users and creators alike: volume. Artists are increasingly grappling with the insatiable demand for content—but is resistance futile?
Shame and the Performance of Vulnerability
Writing and promoting a memoir dealing with difficult subjects demands a performance of both trauma and resilience. How do I protect myself while speaking about the worst thing that ever happened to me?
Books Reviews: The Psychic Tests, After the Tampa, Bodies of Light, In Moonland
The Psychic Tests, After the Tampa, Bodies of Light, In Moonland
What is SAS Australia Trying to Prove?
The hit reality series effectively tortures contestants for our entertainment while framing suffering as personal growth. But what does it mean to valorise combat while war crimes by Australian Special Forces are being exposed?
The Curious Power of a Cathartic Cry
In a time of sustained and prolonged stress, I find myself seeking out content that I know will make me cry. Why does bringing ourselves to tears feel so good?
The Cruel Optimism of Main Character Energy
The plotlessness of the pandemic has prompted people to reimagine their lives within a definitive narrative arc. But does the desire to see ourselves as protagonists deflect from the structural forces that shape our communities?
How BTS Fans are Changing the World
K-pop icons BTS are a global phenomenon with a devoted fanbase. Celebrity activism is nothing new, but BTS ARMY embraces the band’s message of empowerment with a focus on grassroots philanthropy.
Book Reviews: Small Joys of Real Life, The Things We See in the Light, Lies, Damned Lies, My Body Keeps Your Secrets
Small Joys of Real Life, The Things We See in the Light, Lies, Damned Lies, My Body Keeps Your Secrets
Meditations on Mortality in I Was a Simple Man
Portrayals of death, diaspora and family in Christopher Makoto Yogi’s I Was a Simple Man
Madeleine Martiniello on Footscray, furniture and Franco Cozzo
The director of Palazzo di Cozzo on Franco Cozzo’s legacy, community and the changing face of Melbourne.
All Light, Everywhere: Four Ways
Four perspectives on Theo Anthony’s surveillance documentary
The Secret Life of Us and the Impossible Fantasy of Your Twenties
Rewatching the classic Australian drama in my thirties, I find myself nostalgic for a vision of young adulthood that not only didn’t exist for me, but might not exist at all.
Lives on the Line
New Critic: Having briefly worked in a Cambodian factory, I recognised in Joseph Ponthus’ On the Line the exhaustion and absurdity of a life dictated by the clock. But in its focus on individual over class struggle, the novel also has me reflecting on what it means to have a way out.
Book Reviews: Late Bloomer, Muddy People, Dark as Last Night, When Things are Alive They Hum
Late Bloomer, Muddy People, Dark as Last Night, When Things are Alive They Hum
The Cost of Looking Away
A quarter-century on from one of the worst massacres in modern European history, the Oscar-nominated Bosnian film Quo Vadis, Aida? explores what happens when we ignore atrocities even as they unfold right in front of us.
What Happened to the Digital Book Revolution?
The introduction of the Kindle and the iPad brought warnings about the end of the book as we knew it—a prophecy that did not come to pass. In 2021, post-digital book culture is a mix of old and new technologies, flattening some traditional hierarchies and upholding others.
Book Reviews: The Mother Wound, House of Kwa, She is Haunted, The Newcomer
The Mother Wound, House of Kwa, She is Haunted, The Newcomer
Where Are The Australian Anti-War Films?
Australian war films are dominated by stories of individual heroism and nationalistic myth-making, without reflecting on why soldiers were fighting in the first place. A recent wave of films have sought to engage with uncomfortable aspects of Australia’s colonial and military history—but are we capable of a proper reckoning?
Pop Culture’s Mythical ‘Dream Job’
Film and TV sold aspirational media and arts workers the idea that the prestige of glamorous jobs would be worth the long hours and low pay. But in the aftermath of the financial crisis, a generation of exploited and burnt-out workers are increasingly disillusioned by the idea of ‘doing what you love’.
How Goodreads Is Changing Book Culture
Online platforms have shifted the power dynamics between readers, authors and traditional gatekeepers—with readers able to share their emotional, moral and political reactions in real time. Do Goodreads reviewers now exercise too much power over publishers, or the right amount?
Book Reviews: The Covered Wife, One Hundred Days, Good Indian Daughter, Who Gets to Be Smart
The Covered Wife, One Hundred Days, Good Indian Daughter, Who Gets to Be Smart
Rereading Audre Lorde in the Age of #Self-Care
Divorced from its radical origins, self-care has become a capitalist buzzword. In a year where few of us haven’t felt vulnerable, it’s time to get back to the concept’s community roots and reconnect to something bigger than ourselves.
Who Sold Me This?
Reading Now That I See You, I’m struck by the feeling that something is happening in literature as a result of the internet. It feels like Australia’s book market was fed into an algorithm, and this is what came out.
Casa Sendas
The Complicated Grief of a Writer in Exile
New Critic: Memory, language and identity intertwine in Bosnian writer Semezdin Mehmedinović’s My Heart, an autobiographical novel that asks how we carry the painful duty of remembering.
How Minari and Sound of Metal Redefine Asian Masculinity Onscreen
After years of Hollywood desexualising Asian men, Steven Yeun and Riz Ahmed’s Oscar-nominated performances suggest the beginnings of a shift towards more complex portrayals in Western cinema.
Book Reviews: Car Crash, As Beautiful as Any Other, Flock, Gunk Baby
Car Crash, As Beautiful as Any Other, Flock, Gunk Baby
Book Reviews: A Room Called Earth, The Committed, Black and Blue, The Believer
A Room Called Earth, The Committed, Black and Blue, The Believer
The Dying Art of the Blockbuster Film Trailer
In an algorithm-fuelled attention economy, trailers feel increasingly like compressed versions of whole films. As studios turn pivotal moments and big reveals into shareable online content, are we at risk of losing the art of a great trailer?
How Sponsored Content is Reshaping the Music Industry
Musicians were once criticised for ‘selling out’ if they leveraged their fame to sell products. But as the influencer economy changes attitudes towards authenticity, artists are increasingly turning to paid partnerships to make a profit in a fragmented market.
Melbourne Women in Film Festival Critics Lab
Minor Detail Asks if Language Can Ever Truly Bear Witness
New Critic: Palestinian author Adania Shibli’s novel explores how the violence of occupation stretches through history—and the inadequacy of language and translation to fully express it.
Book Reviews: Dropbear, Emotional Female, Friends & Dark Shapes, Monsters
Dropbear, Emotional Female, Friends & Dark Shapes, Monsters
MONA’s Compelling Contradictions
Reopening after its 2020 shutdown, the shape of David Walsh’s big experiment can be seen clearly: Both a subversion of the traditional museum and a reinforcement of it.
Negative Reviews, Positive Vibes and Being a Forever Reader
Rather than being a vehicle for selling books, the critic in Australian literature is first and foremost a loving, engaged reader. In a fundamentally privileged industry, false praise harms writing more than it helps.
Book Reviews: Eating with My Mouth Open, Growing Up Disabled in Australia, Born into This, Fake Accounts
Eating with My Mouth Open, Growing Up Disabled in Australia, Born into This, Fake Accounts
Broad City and the Power of Intimate Friendship
Rewatching Broad City, I was struck by the intensity and depth of the show’s central friendship. Coming out of the isolation of the pandemic, what kind of friendships can we build to help us deal with future crises?
How Memoir Writers are Reframing Illness
Contemporary writers are demystifying the experience of illness, demanding health care be approached as a community issue rather than an individual battle.
Did The X-Files Prime Us for the QAnon Era?
The smash-hit 90s series featured deep state conspiracies, evil elites and microchips hidden in vaccines—did we take a show that told us to ‘trust no-one’ too seriously?
KYD staff and contributors share their favourite culture of 2020
Staff and contributors share the culture that got us through the year
An Ode to the Acknowledgements Page
One of my favourite parts of a book is the acknowledgements section—it’s a place where an author lets their guard down, and reveals as much about gratitude and hope as they do about heartache and hard work.
Levelling Up in the Video Game Industry
Whether they’re creators or players, marginalised people face barriers at every level of the gaming industry. But while major studios remain slow to evolve, others are leading the way to create a more welcoming and diverse video game community.
How Michaela Coel Subverted TV’s Writer Trope
Whatever their gender, onscreen depictions of writer characters overwhelmingly centre white perspectives. In I May Destroy You, Coel eschews universality for an intersectionality that avoids tokenistic POC representation.
The Isolation at the Heart of Australian Horror
Australian horror films have always had a unique fascination with the continent’s landscape. Though the genre has evolved from the Ozploitation era into more complex territory, it remains moulded by the terra nullius myth and a colonial sense of disconnection from the land.
Book Reviews: Lucky’s, A Jealous Tide, Collisions, Azadi, Memorial
Lucky’s, A Jealous Tide, Collisions, Azadi, Memorial
It’s a simple, humorous meme—queer people can’t sit properly. But examining queer sitting in film and television suggests something more radical: a rejection of strictly defined rules about what we can do with our bodies.
KYD’s October Culture Picks
Staff and contributors share the culture we’re loving this month
Ceridwen Dovey on Harvard, Reunions, and Life After Truth
Strangers on Country
What does it mean to travel as an Asian Australian on Aboriginal land? How reading travel memoir has helped me reckon with ethical questions of identity, colonialism and the complexities of Australian history.
Why Rom-Coms Are So Good at Exploring Loss
Romantic comedies have always been a source of comfort in times of trouble. But they’re not just fluffy distraction—the promise and security of ‘happy ever after’ can make space to delve into more difficult emotions.
What Happened to Bend It Like Beckham’s Post-Racial Utopia?
When Bend it Like Beckham was released in 2002, for many South Asians it represented a sunny vision of racial harmony. And while I still love the film, there’s a heavier, lesser-known release from the same year which speaks more to me in our current political moment.
Book Reviews: Hysteria, Song of the Crocodile, Honeybee, Everything In Its Right Place, Viva La Novella 2020
Hysteria, Song of the Crocodile, Honeybee, Everything In Its Right Place, Dark Wave, Late Sonata
Why Culturally Aware Reviews Matter
After publishing my first novel Ghost Bird, I found even positive reviews would often show a lack of awareness of my beliefs, treating them as ‘myths and legends’. The structural racism of Australia bleeds through into everyday language and the expectations non-Indigenous reviewers place onto books by First Nations writers.
KYD staff and contributors share their September culture picks
Staff and contributors share what we’re loving this month
The Joyful Voyeurism of Reaction Videos
The popularity of reaction videos on Youtube and Tiktok is rooted in our desire to share culture with others. The format bypasses traditional gatekeepers of TV and radio, allowing content creators and viewers to engage in a new kind of digital show and tell. But how long can the authenticity of these videos last?
Book Reviews: The F Team, Poly, Revenge, Ordinary Matter, State Highway One, No Presents Please
The F Team, Poly, Revenge, Ordinary Matter, State Highway One, No Presents Please
KYD staff and contributors share their August culture picks
Taylor Swift and the Rebirth of Poptimism
The poptimism movement sought to emphasise the legitimacy and authenticity of artists and music often derided as superficial. Pop today is both commercially successful and critically respected—but in a year that has laid bare the limits of celebrity and fan culture, have we moved beyond the concept of the ‘pop star’ entirely?
Where Are All the Editors of Colour?
Calls for publishers to diversify their lists are louder than ever, but to achieve true diversity we need to look at the industry’s gatekeepers. The glaring absence of First Nations editors and editors of colour exposes systemic issues in an industry dominated by whiteness.
Domestic Abuse and Writing Through the Unspeakable
Recent Australian and international releases use memoir, poetry and reportage to look laterally at the trauma, grief and nuance of domestic abuse in marginalised communities.
The Gay Generation Gap in Suk Suk and Ellie & Abbie (& Ellie’s Dead Aunt)
MIFF Critics Campus: On the handling of intergenerational LGBTQIA+ issues in Suk Suk and Ellie & Abbie (& Ellie’s Dead Aunt).
Walls of Silence: Outside the Oranges Are Blooming and The Plastic House
MIFF Critics Campus: On depictions of silence and solace in Outside the Oranges Are Blooming and The Plastic House
High and Dry: Anthony Chen’s Wet Season
MIFF Critics Campus: Portrayals of loneliness and yearned-for comfort in Anthony Chen’s Wet Season
Book Reviews: The Fogging, Kokomo, Loner, Why Visit America, The Most Beautiful Job in the World, Real Life
The Fogging, Kokomo, Loner, Real Life, Why Visit America, The Most Beautiful Job in the World
KYD staff and contributors share their July culture picks
The Joy of ‘Bad’ Art
As the internet democratises art making and viewing, artists considered traditionally unworthy by galleries can find huge followings online. From botched frescoes to crude online cartoons, why is there such appeal in art and meme language that is stylistically simple and childish?
Book Reviews: A Lonely Girl is a Dangerous Thing; Living on Stolen Land; Metal Fish, Falling Snow; After Australia; Money for Something; Hazelwood
A Lonely Girl is a Dangerous Thing; Living on Stolen Land; Metal Fish, Falling Snow; After Australia; Money for Something; Hazelwood
What are Young Australians Searching For in Berlin?
For generations of settler Australian creatives, Berlin has been a rite of passage, a mythical promised land of danger and giddying freedom. Is this obsession with the ruins of Europe a way of forgetting our own violent past?
KYD staff and contributors share their June culture picks
Why MasterChef is a Masterclass in Australian Propaganda
One of Australia’s most successful TV exports, MasterChef isn’t just cakes, curries, and delightful, diverse contestants hugging—the series also delivers generous helpings of cultural sanitisation at home, and soft power propaganda abroad.
New Reviews: Fathoms; Smart Ovens for Lonely People; The Rain Heron; The Spill; Rise & Shine; Sweatshop Women Volume 2
Fathoms; Smart Ovens for Lonely People; The Rain Heron; The Spill; Rise & Shine; Sweatshop Women vol.2
KYD staff and contributors share their May culture picks
The White Feminist Lead and her Posse of Colour
The explosion of film and TV with female protagonists in recent years has been celebrated as a win for diversity. But when people of colour are relegated to ensemble roles, and white men still dominate behind the camera, is this just a smokescreen for the old hierarchy?
The Cinematic Melancholy of the Suburbs
New Critic: The safe but monotonous facade of suburbia has long inspired teenage dreams of escape. But for a generation of migrant families like mine, the suburbs were a romanticised dream of assimilation. How can new and classic films help us reconcile these dissonant mythologies?
Insomnia and Fear Collide in The Shapeless Unease
In her memoir on grief, rage and unrelenting sleeplessness, novelist Samantha Harvey processes how to live in an age of constant uncertainty.
Memoir, Fiction, or Something In Between
Writers have long inserted themselves into their stories, but in recent years readers have increasingly turned to works which fall somewhere between fiction and memoir—a hybrid genre that allows both authors and readers to indulge in an idealised vision of the writer’s life.
James Bradley on Ghost Species and the Climate Crisis
New Reviews: Please Don’t Hug Me; A Treacherous Country; Mammoth; The Year the Maps Changed; Torched; Come: A Memoir
Please Don’t Hug Me; A Treacherous Country; Mammoth; The Year the Maps Changed; Torched; Come: A Memoir
Why Are Filmmakers So Bad at Texting?
Despite being a fixture of modern life, phones and texting remain difficult to portray authentically onscreen. While some filmmakers seek to avoid the problem altogether, others are choosing to embrace the awkwardness and surreality of digital communication in their storytelling.
KYD staff and contributors share their April culture picks
New Reviews: The Adversary; The Animals in that Country; Only Mostly Devastated; Exciting Times; Stone Sky Gold Mountain; Almost A Mirror
The Adversary; The Animals in that Country; Only Mostly Devastated; Exciting Times; Stone Sky Gold Mountain; Almost A Mirror
KYD staff and contributors share their March culture picks
The Personal Essay is Dead, Long Live the Personal Essay
In the wake of the mid-2010s ‘personal essay boom’, writers are shaping and stretching the personal essay form to share stories that refuse a traditional telling.
Why Musicals Are TV’s Problem Child
TV producers have been trying to make narrative-driven musical TV series work for decades, but few have seen critical or popular success. Can the small screen format ever match the big feelings of the stage?
Queer Cinema’s Love Affair with the Dancefloor
New Critic: Club scenes are a common motif in queer cinema, capturing both the desire for liberation and transformation. But do the dancefloors of seminal films speak to the potentialities of real queer spaces? Or are they merely wish fulfilment?
New Book Reviews: Shirl, Blueberries, The Wandering
Shirl, Blueberries, The Wandering
Lessons in Capitalism from the Soviet Cartoons of my Youth
The Eastern European cartoons I grew up with portray an alternate universe of their Western counterparts, with vastly different visions of utopia and citizenship. One little Czech mole offers a quietly subversive critique of both capitalism and Soviet communism.
KYD staff and contributors share their February culture picks