Biographers in Conversation

Gabriella

Biographer Gabriella Kelly-Davies chats with biographers across the world about the myriad of choices they make while researching, writing and publishing life stories. In every episode, she explores elements of narrative strategy such as structure, use of fiction techniques, facts and truth, beginnings and endings and to what extent the writer interpreted the evidence rather than providing clues and leaving it to readers to do the interpreting themselves. She also asks how they researched their books; how they balanced a subject’s public, personal and inner lives; and ethical issues, such as privacy and revealing secrets. read less
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Episodes

Melanie Nolan: The ADB’s Story
Aug 14 2024
Melanie Nolan: The ADB’s Story
In this episode of Biographers in Conversation, Gabriella chats with Melanie Nolan about her book, The ADB’s Story, the history of the Australian Dictionary of Biography she co-edited with Christine Fernon. Melanie is the general editor of ADB, which is widely recognised as an Australian cultural institution and national treasure. She is also Director of Australia’s National Centre of Biography. Here’s what you’ll discover in this episode:  Melanie Nolan introduces us to the Australian Dictionary of Biography, a vibrant and versatile digital tool that enables us to understand our nation’s past and to think hard about the present moment and our future as an inclusive nation that celebrates diversity.Melanie reveals why she felt compelled to write The ADB’s Story and why it was vital to create it while the ADB team was imagining the next phase of the dictionary’s future.Melanie explains why ADB is considered internationally as innovative compared with similar publications in other countries.Melanie shares her vision for the dictionary, which is to showcase the multisensory experiences of Australians at different stages of their life through photographs, audio and video recordings. She also reveals ADB’s ambitions to reimagine itself over future decades by tracing networks and connections between biographical subjects and how these revelations will enable each of us to better understand our past, present and future. https://biographersinconversation.com Facebook: Share Your Life Story Linkedin: Gabriella Kelly Davies Instagram: Biographersinconversation
Ryan Cropp: Donald Horne. A Life in the Lucky Country
Jul 17 2024
Ryan Cropp: Donald Horne. A Life in the Lucky Country
In this episode of Biographers in Conversation, Ryan Cropp shares with Gabriella the multiplicity of choices he made while writing Donald Horne. A Life in the Lucky Country, the biography of Donald Horne, a prominent and outspoken Australian journalist, writer, public intellectual and social critic. Here’s what you’ll discover in this episode:  Why Ryan Cropp felt compelled to write a biography of Donald Horne.The meaning behind the second part of the book’s title: A Life in the Lucky Country. Why Ryan opens the biography with a close up view of Horne sitting on a Sydney bus looking out the window while he was being filmed for a current affairs program.Ryan’s exhaustive research strategy and how he narrowed the biographical scope to ensure he didn’t write a tome.How Ryan incorporated information from Horne’s three autobiographies into the narrative, yet avoided serving as Horne’s ventriloquist given that memoirists are unreliable narrators of their own life.How Ryan made Myfanwy, Horne’s wife and literary partner, a central character How Ryan represented Myfanwy’s point of view given that the wives of prominent men are often invisible in the biographies of their husbands. How Ryan achieved a fine balance between portraying Horne’s public, private and interior lives. The literary devices Ryan employed to craft an enthralling narrative. Ryan’s beliefs about the role of a biographer. https://biographersinconversation.com Facebook: Share Your Life Story Linkedin: Gabriella Kelly Davies Instagram: Biographersinconversation
Cathy Perkins: The Shelf Life of Zora Cross
Jul 3 2024
Cathy Perkins: The Shelf Life of Zora Cross
In this episode of Biographers in Conversation, Cathy Perkins chats with Gabriella about the choices she made while writing The Shelf Life of Zora Cross, her biography of Zora Cross, a prolific writer who caused a literary sensation in 1917 with her provocative series of erotic sonnets that celebrated sexual passion. The Shelf Life of Zora Cross was shortlisted in the 2020 NSW Premier’s History Awards and highly commended in the 2021 National Biography Awards. This second edition of the acclaimed biography includes a foreword by Bernadette Brennan, winner of the National Biography Award in 2022.  Here’s what you’ll discover in this episode:  You’ll meet Zora Cross. The meaning of the book’s title: The Shelf Life of Zora Cross. Why Cathy opens the book with a scene of a young girl sitting and writing on her family’s verandah.Why Cathy includes excerpts from Zora’s constant stream of stories published in the ‘Children’s Corner’ of the Australian Town and Country Journal. Why Cathy quotes from so many of Zora’s 340 lengthy letters to the Sydney publisher George Robertson. Why Cathy shapes the narrative with a series of self-contained chapters, each of them centered on Zora’s relationship with a literary luminary.The novelistic devices Cathy employed to craft lyrical narrative. The extent to which Cathy believes she captures the truth of her subjectCathy’s thoughts on the role of a biographer. https://biographersinconversation.com Facebook: Share Your Life Story Linkedin: Gabriella Kelly Davies Instagram: Biographersinconversation
Ann-Marie Priest: My Tongue Is My Own. A Life of Gwen Harwood
Jun 12 2024
Ann-Marie Priest: My Tongue Is My Own. A Life of Gwen Harwood
In this episode of Biographers in Conversation, Ann-Marie Priest chats with Gabriella about the choices she made while writing her award-winning biography My Tongue Is My Own. A Life of Gwen Harwood, the first biography of Gwen Harwood, one of Australia’s most distinctive poets. My Tongue Is My Own follows Gwen from her childhood in 1920s Brisbane, to her final years in Hobart in the 1990s.  Here’s what you’ll discover in this episode: Why Ann-Marie Priest felt inspired to write Gwen Harwood’s biography.The meaning of the book’s title: My Tongue is my Own.How Ann-Marie chose to present Harwood’s many conflicting personas and contradictions.How Ann-Marie represented the historical, social and cultural context in which Harwood struggled to forge a career as a poet.How Ann-Marie portrayed Harwood’s behaviour as a chameleon and a rebel, one who adopted several pseudonyms and staged several literary hoaxes to highlight entrenched discrimination against female poets. The ethical decisions Ann-Marie made when deciding whether to reveal secrets and sensitive information contained in previously unpublished letters.  How Ann-Marie balanced Harwood’s professional, personal and interior lives.The extent to which Ann-Marie believes she captured the truth of her subject.The literary devices Ann-Marie employed to craft compelling narrative.How Ann-Marie reconciled Harwood’s refusal to be bound by conventions, yet at the same time, lived a conventional life as a wife and mother to four children. How Ann-Marie balanced Harwood’s human story with literary criticism. https://biographersinconversation.com Facebook: Share Your Life Story Linkedin: Gabriella Kelly Davies Instagram: Biographersinconversation
Brett Mason: Wizards of Oz
May 22 2024
Brett Mason: Wizards of Oz
In this episode of Biographers in Conversation, Brett Mason chats with Gabriella about the choices he made while writing Wizards of Oz: How Oliphant and Florey helped win the war and shape the modern world.  Wizards of Oz is an account of a friendship between two Adelaide men, the physicist Mark Oliphant and medical researcher Howard Florey and how their scientific discoveries profoundly impacted the course of World War II. It is a gripping tale of secret missions, international intrigue and triumph against all odds.   Here’s what you’ll discover in this episode: Why Brett Mason chose to open Wizards of Oz with an electrifying prologue about Oliphant and Florey’s high stakes, top secret missions to gain political and financial support from the American government and U.S. businesses for their scientific projects at a critical stage of World War II.Brett’s research strategy and how he narrowed the biographical scope after uncovering an avalanche of primary source material. How Brett learned about the intricacies of microwave technology, nuclear physics and penicillin research given his background in politics rather than science and medicine. How Brett translated complex scientific information into a propulsive narrative that keeps you as the reader on the edge of your seat wondering what happens next.The extent to which Brett balanced scientific discoveries and advocacy with Oliphant and Florey’s human stories.How Brett crafted a cohesive narrative from the experiences of two brilliant yet very different researchers who worked in disparate fields of science. How Brett presented Oliphant and Florey’s lives with immediacy, so you as the reader feel as if you are Oliphant and Florey experiencing their frustrations, fear and desperation to gain support for their scientific endeavours when the stakes were so high.  https://biographersinconversation.com Facebook: Share Your Life Story Linkedin: Gabriella Kelly Davies Instagram: Biographersinconversation
Joel Birnie: My People’s Songs: How an Indigenous Family Survived Colonial Tasmania
May 15 2024
Joel Birnie: My People’s Songs: How an Indigenous Family Survived Colonial Tasmania
In this episode of Biographers in Conversation, Joel Stephen Birnie chats with Gabriella about the choices he made while crafting My People’s Songs: How an Indigenous Family Survived Colonial Tasmania, his historical biography of his earliest known ancestral grandmother and her two surviving daughters. These three extraordinary matriarchs fought for the Indigenous communities they founded in Tasmania, sparking a tradition of social justice that continues in Joel’s family today.  Here’s what you’ll discover in this episode: You’ll meet Tarenootairer, Joel’s earliest known ancestral grandmother, and her two surviving daughters, Mary Ann Arthur and Fanny Cochrane Smith.Why Joel felt compelled to write My People’s Songs and his goal in writing the book. Why Joel chose to structure My People’s Songs around three self-contained biographies of Tarenootairer, Mary Ann and Fanny and why he shared their stories from their perspective and in their voices. How Mary Ann’s fight for autonomy laid the foundation for contemporary Indigenous politics.How he chose to portray Mary Ann’s role as a voice of self-empowerment for Tasmania’s Indigenous people. Fanny’s skilled and tenacious political advocacy despite intense opposition from Tasmanian politicians and some sections of the media. Fanny’s challenge to the false declaration of Indigenous Tasmanian extinction and why this was, and still is, crucial. Joel’s research strategy given that few archival records exist of Indigenous peoples’ lives in 19th century Tasmania and those that are available lack an Indigenous perspective. They are also tainted by colonial half-truths, interpretations and propaganda.  https://biographersinconversation.com Facebook: Share Your Life Story Linkedin: Gabriella Kelly Davies Instagram: Biographersinconversation
Kenneth Miller, Mapping the Darkness, The Visionary Scientists who Unlocked the Mysteries of Sleep (Part Two)
May 1 2024
Kenneth Miller, Mapping the Darkness, The Visionary Scientists who Unlocked the Mysteries of Sleep (Part Two)
In this episode, Gabriella continues her conversation with Kenneth Miller about his  group biography Mapping the Darkness, The Visionary Scientists who Unlocked the Mysteries of Sleep. As we learned in the previous episode, a century ago, sleep was widely considered a state of nothingness and a wasteful habit we could learn to overcome. Thanks to the four scientists Kenneth introduced us to in episode one, we now know the truth: that sleep is an incredibly complex phenomenon, central to our physical, emotional, and cognitive health. Here’s what you’ll discover in this episode: How Kenneth captured each character’s passion for research and their sense of scientific wonder.How Kenneth portrayed each scientist’s quest to uncover the mysteries of sleep.How Kenneth structured the narrative to create a gripping adventure of the human spirit.Details of the famous cave experiment in 1938 when two sleep researchers retreated into the cavernous Mammoth Cave in Kentucky for 32 days to find out when they could switch to a 28-hour sleep cycle after being deprived of environmental cues. Kenneth’s meticulous research strategy and how he grasped complicated sleep science. How Kenneth transformed thousands of pages of complex scientific information into a propulsive and compelling biography of the quartet of individuals who revolutionised our understanding of why we sleep and how we can get sleep better. https://biographersinconversation.com Facebook: Share Your Life Story Linkedin: Gabriella Kelly Davies Instagram: Biographersinconversation