
Anonymous Was A Woman Podcast (Future Women)
Explore every episode of Anonymous Was A Woman Podcast
Pub. Date | Title | Duration | |
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03 Feb 2021 | Brit Bennett: On belonging | 00:26:02 | |
Brit Bennett is an American writer with a brilliant track record. Her debut novel The Mothers (2016) was a New York Times best-seller, as was her second novel, The Vanishing Half (2020). In this interview, Brit talks to Jamila and Astrid about her brilliant novels, and also about some big topics - passing, colourism and the state of the publishing industry. CHAT WITH US Join our discussion using hashtag #AnonymousWasAWomanPod and don't forget to follow Jamila (on Instagram and Twitter) and Astrid (also on Instagram and Twitter) to continue the conversation. This podcast is sponsored by Hachette Publishing and is brought to you by Future Women. The podcast is produced by Bad Producer Productions. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information. | |||
07 Mar 2021 | Barriers | 00:26:10 | |
Today Astrid Edwards is joined by Oli Lathouris to consider the barriers we find in our own lives through the lens of fiction and non-fiction. Chapter 1: Astrid and Oli consider the barriers we find in our own lives through the lens of fiction and non-fiction. Chapter 2: Oli brings The Hating Game, a thinking-woman's romance by Sally Thorne, to the discussion. Chapter 3: Astrid takes a more serious turn and discusses Ijeoma Oluo's Mediocre: The Dangerous Legacy of White Male Power. Recommendations: Astrid recommends The Shape of Sound by Fiona Murphy, and Oli recommends Ghosts by Dolly Alderton. CHAT WITH US Join our discussion using hashtag #AnonymousWasAWomanPod and don't forget to follow Jamila (on Instagram and Twitter) and Astrid (also on Instagram and Twitter) to continue the conversation. This podcast is sponsored by Hachette Publishing and is brought to you by Future Women. The podcast is produced by Bad Producer Productions. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information. | |||
20 Sep 2020 | Momentum | 00:25:26 | |
Jamila Rizvi and Astrid Edwards consider momentum and how we create real and lasting change in our world. Chapter 1: Jamila and Astrid consider what momentum actually means. Chapter 2: Jamila introduces Daring to Drive: A Saudi Woman's Awakening by Manal Al Sharif and reminds us all how much momentum one person can create. Chapter 3: Astrid makes the case for us all to understand how economies work in this time of global upheaval and recommends Talking to My Daughter: A brief history of capitalism by Yanis Varoufakis. Recommendations: Astrid recommends two works by older women who have made a difference - Maya Angelou's I Know Why the Caged Bird Sings and What Can I Do? by Jane Fonda. Jamila throws back to the classics and recommends Beloved by Toni Morrison and The Second Sex by Simone de Beauvoir. Join us on Thursday for an interview on momentum and science with Angela Saini. CHAT WITH US Join our discussion using hashtag #AnonymousWasAWomanPod and don't forget to follow Jamila (on Instagram and Twitter) and Astrid (also on Instagram and Twitter) to continue the conversation. This podcast is brought to you by Future Women. The podcast is produced by Bad Producer Productions. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information. | |||
30 Jul 2020 | Bonus: Zoya Patel recommends reading Durga Chew-Bose | 00:08:00 | |
In the lead up to Season 2, Jamila Rizvi and Astrid Edwards are inviting women of colour to recommend to you their favourite reads. Zoya Patel, author of No Country Woman, recommends Too Much and Not the Mood: Essays by Durga Chew-Bose. The title of this collection of essays is of course a quote from Virginia Woolf, as is the title of our podcast. Zoya also gives a shout out to the work of The Stella Prize, which is changing the way we read in Australia. Let us know what you think and what you are reading with the hashtag #AnonymousWasAWomanPod.
CHAT WITH US Join our discussion using hashtag #AnonymousWasAWomanPod and don't forget to follow Jamila (on Instagram and Twitter) and Astrid (also on Instagram and Twitter) to continue the conversation. This podcast is brought to you by Future Women. The podcast is produced by Bad Producer Productions. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information. | |||
07 Jul 2021 | Maria Lewis | 00:36:39 | |
Maria Lewis is an author, screenwriter and film curator, and she knows everything about women and representation in fantasy. Her best-selling debut novel Who's Afraid? was published in 2016, followed by its sequel Who's Afraid Too? in 2017, which was nominated for Best Horror Novel at the Aurealis Awards. Who's Afraid? is currently being developed for television. Her Young Adult debut, It Came From The Deep, was released globally in 2018, followed by her fourth book, The Witch Who Courted Death, which won Best Fantasy Novel at the Aurealis Awards in 2019. Her fifth novel set within the shared supernatural universe - The Wailing Woman - was nominated for Best Fantasy Novel at the Aurealis Awards in 2020, followed by the publication of her sixth novel, Who's Still Afraid?, and book seven The Rose Daughter. CHAT WITH US Join our discussion using hashtag #AnonymousWasAWomanPod and don't forget to follow Jamila (on Instagram and Twitter) and Astrid (also on Instagram and Twitter) to continue the conversation. This podcast is sponsored by Hachette Publishing and is brought to you by Future Women. The podcast is produced by Bad Producer Productions. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information. | |||
12 Sep 2021 | On questioning | 00:24:17 | |
Helen McCabe once again joins Astrid Edwards on Anonymous Was A Woman. Tis week they agree and love two wonderful debut works of fiction (unlike last week!). Chapter 1: This week our loose theme is questioning. Astrid asks Helen what she thinks will happen in 2022, and Helen has a great answer. Chapter 2: Helen recommends 'Small Joys of Real Life' by Allee Richards. Chapter 3: Astrid discusses 'Other People's Clothes' by Calla Henkel. Join us on Thursday to hear Jamila Rizvi and Astrid Edwards talk to two writers who were to appear at Melbourne Writers Festival. CHAT WITH US Join our discussion using hashtag #AnonymousWasAWomanPod and don't forget to follow Jamila (on Instagram and Twitter) and Astrid (also on Instagram and Twitter) to continue the conversation. This podcast is sponsored by Hachette Publishing and is brought to you by Future Women. The podcast is produced by Bad Producer Productions. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information. | |||
04 Oct 2020 | Justice | 00:22:38 | |
Jamila Rizvi and Astrid Edwards consider how justice - that greatest of concepts - appears in recent fiction and non-fiction. Chapter 1: What does justice have to do with books? Chapter 2: Jamila considers 'wokeness' and racial justice in her reading of Such A Fun Age by Kiley Reid. Chapter 3: Astrid considers climate and intergenerational justice as discussed in Naomi Klein's On Fire: The Burning Case for a Green New Deal. Recommendations: Jamila recommends the legal classic from Helen Garner, Joe Cinque's Consolation: A True Story of Death, Grief and the Law. Astrid takes a different approach and lists the fiction and non-fiction recommendations that consider the climate crisis previously recommended from Seasons 1 and 2 of Anonymous Was A Woman. CHAT WITH US Join our discussion using hashtag #AnonymousWasAWomanPod and don't forget to follow Jamila (on Instagram and Twitter) and Astrid (also on Instagram and Twitter) to continue the conversation. This podcast is brought to you by Future Women. The podcast is produced by Bad Producer Productions. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information. | |||
24 May 2020 | Fear | 00:41:31 | |
Author Rebekah Robertson joins Jamila Rizvi and Astrid Edwards to discuss fear in life and literature.
CHAT WITH US Join our discussion using hashtag #AnonymousWasAWomanPod and don't forget to follow Jamila (on Instagram and Twitter) and Astrid (also on Instagram and Twitter) to continue the conversation. This podcast is brought to you by Future Women and Penguin Random House Australia. The podcast is produced by Bad Producer Productions. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information. | |||
07 Oct 2020 | Rick Morton: On justice | 00:26:36 | |
Rick Morton joins Jamila Rizvi and Astrid Edwards to consider justice in both our personal ives and the society we live in. Rick is an award-winning journalist and a Senior Reporter for The Saturday Paper. His memoir One Hundred Years of Dirt was shortlisted for the Victorian Premier’s Literary Awards, longlisted for the Walkley Book of the Year, and longlisted for both Biography Book of the Year and the Matt Richell Award for New Writer of the Year for the ABIA Awards. His second work, On Money, will hit the shelves before Christmas. This is the final episode in Season 2, but we hope to be back with you soon. CHAT WITH US Join our discussion using hashtag #AnonymousWasAWomanPod and don't forget to follow Jamila (on Instagram and Twitter) and Astrid (also on Instagram and Twitter) to continue the conversation. This podcast is brought to you by Future Women. The podcast is produced by Bad Producer Productions. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information. | |||
27 Jun 2021 | Heartbreak | 00:27:35 | |
Chapter 1: What is heartbreak? When have you felt it and where do you turn when you are heartbroken? Chapter 2: Jamila recommends 'Heart Sick', the new non-fiction work by Jessie Stephens. Chapter 3: Astrid also recommends a non-fiction work - 'The Mother Wound' by Amani Haydar. Recommendations: Jamila recommends 'Aftermath: On Marriage and Separation' by Rachael Cusk, and Astrid brings us back to the world of fiction recommending 'Love Objects' by Emily Maguire. CHAT WITH US Join our discussion using hashtag #AnonymousWasAWomanPod and don't forget to follow Jamila (on Instagram and Twitter) and Astrid (also on Instagram and Twitter) to continue the conversation. This podcast is sponsored by Hachette Publishing and is brought to you by Future Women. The podcast is produced by Bad Producer Productions. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information. | |||
26 Apr 2020 | Anxiety | 00:37:11 | |
Widely awarded and acclaimed author Chloe Hooper joins Jamila Rizvi and Astrid Edwards to discuss anxiety and books in times of crisis.
CHAT WITH US Join our discussion using hashtag #AnonymousWasAWomanPod and don't forget to follow Jamila (on Instagram and Twitter) and Astrid (also on Instagram and Twitter) to continue the conversation. This podcast is brought to you by Future Women and Penguin Random House Australia. The podcast is produced by Bad Producer Productions. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information. | |||
10 May 2020 | Solidarity | 00:41:46 | |
National treasure and writer Benjamin Law joins Jamila Rizvi and Astrid Edwards to discuss solidarity in literature and non-fiction.
CHAT WITH US Join our discussion using hashtag #AnonymousWasAWomanPod and don't forget to follow Jamila (on Instagram and Twitter) and Astrid (also on Instagram and Twitter) to continue the conversation. This podcast is brought to you by Future Women and Penguin Random House Australia. The podcast is produced by Bad Producer Productions. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information. | |||
06 Feb 2022 | Introducing 'There's No Place Like Home' from Future Women | 00:03:07 | |
Through ten captivating episodes, There’s No Place Like Home pulls back the curtain to reveal the nature and impact of domestic and family violence in Australia. Told in survivors’ own words, each episode tells the story of ten extraordinary people who generously share their most intimate thoughts, feelings, and experiences with you. There’s No Place Like Home is hosted by Tarang Chawla, whose sister Nikita was killed by her partner in 2015. Tarang brings his lived experience, empathy and understanding to the fore as he presents an unflinching assessment of the current situation and explores the possible solutions. This is a podcast by Future Women, made in collaboration with CommBank, which is supporting long-term financial independence for victim-survivors through CommBank Next Chapter. There’s No Place Like Home drops 22 February 2022. Subscribe now.
Content note: This podcast includes descriptions of family violence and may be upsetting to some listeners. If you have experienced or are at risk of domestic and family violence and/or sexual assault, you can call the national counselling service 1800RESPECT (1800 737 732). In an emergency, or if you are not feeling safe, always call the police on 000. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information. | |||
04 May 2020 | Bonus 2: #Couplegoals? Best and worst relationships on the page | 00:07:00 | |
In our second bonus episode, Jamila Rizvi and Astrid Edwards reveal their favourite (and least favourite) relationships on the page. Some of them are a little embarrassing. This bonus episode follows on from Episode 2: Lust. CHAT WITH US Join our discussion using hashtag #AnonymousWasAWomanPod and don't forget to follow Jamila (on Instagram and Twitter) and Astrid (also on Instagram and Twitter) to continue the conversation. This podcast is brought to you by Future Women and Penguin Random House Australia. The podcast is produced by Bad Producer Productions. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information. | |||
08 Aug 2021 | From the archives | Min Jin Lee on triumph | 00:49:15 | |
As we wait for Season 5 we are bringing back our highest rating episodes. This interview with Min Jin Lee was originally released on 15 June 2020. Min Jin joined Jamila and Astrid to discuss triumph in literature. The hero’s journey has shaped fiction since before we called it that. Is the heroine's journey different?
CHAT WITH US Join our discussion using hashtag #AnonymousWasAWomanPod and don't forget to follow Jamila (on Instagram and Twitter) and Astrid (also on Instagram and Twitter) to continue the conversation. This podcast is brought to you by Future Women. The podcast is produced by Bad Producer Productions. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information. | |||
17 Feb 2021 | Jiveny Blair-West: On love | 00:18:54 | |
Jiveny Blair-West, a dating coach, co-wrote How to Make the Biggest Decision of Your Life with her father, psychiatrist George Blair-West. In this interview, Jiveny talks Jamila and Astrid through how the younger generations can make one of the biggest decisions of their lives. CHAT WITH US Join our discussion using hashtag #AnonymousWasAWomanPod and don't forget to follow Jamila (on Instagram and Twitter) and Astrid (also on Instagram and Twitter) to continue the conversation. This podcast is sponsored by Hachette Publishing and is brought to you by Future Women. The podcast is produced by Bad Producer Productions. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information. | |||
18 Jul 2021 | Tomorrow | 00:28:13 | |
Chapter 1: What will happen tomorrow? How do writers explore what may come through both fiction and non-fiction? Chapter 2: Jamila explores the latest novel from Kazuo Ishiguro, 'Klara and the Sun'. Chapter 3: Astrid takes a different approach and turns to non-fiction. She discusses two recent works from Stan Grant - 'Stan Grant on Thomas Keneally' and 'With the Falling of the Dusk'. Recommendations: Jamila recommends 'Sand Talk: How Indigenous Thinking Can Save the Word' by Tyson Yunkaporta. Astrid recommends switching up your reading habits - if you tend to read fiction, pick up some non-fiction, and if you have a non-fiction habit, try a little fiction for your next read. CHAT WITH US Join our discussion using hashtag #AnonymousWasAWomanPod and don't forget to follow Jamila (on Instagram and Twitter) and Astrid (also on Instagram and Twitter) to continue the conversation. This podcast is sponsored by Hachette Publishing and is brought to you by Future Women. The podcast is produced by Bad Producer Productions. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information. | |||
09 Sep 2020 | Cole Brown: On rage | 00:19:57 | |
Cole Brown joins Jamila Rizvi and Astrid Edwards to consider rage, and especially those times when rage can lead to action. Cole is the author of the debut genre-bending millennial masterpiece Greyboy: Finding blackness in a white world. Join us on Monday for an episode on determination. CHAT WITH US Join our discussion using hashtag #AnonymousWasAWomanPod and don't forget to follow Jamila (on Instagram and Twitter) and Astrid (also on Instagram and Twitter) to continue the conversation. This podcast is brought to you by Future Women. The podcast is produced by Bad Producer Productions. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information. | |||
13 Oct 2021 | Lisa Millar | 00:24:56 | |
Lisa Millar is the co-host of ABC TV's News Breakfast, and 'Daring to Fly' is her memoir about conquering fear and finding joy. Lisa returned to the ABC in Australia after finishing a decade-long posting as bureau chief in both London and Washington DC, covering some of the world's biggest stories. She began her career at the Gympie Times in 1988 and has worked in print, TV and radio. She won a Walkley Award in 2005 for investigative reporting. CHAT WITH US Join our discussion using hashtag #AnonymousWasAWomanPod and don't forget to follow Jamila (on Instagram and Twitter) and Astrid (also on Instagram and Twitter) to continue the conversation. This podcast is sponsored by Hachette Publishing and is brought to you by Future Women. The podcast is produced by Bad Producer Productions. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information. | |||
05 Sep 2021 | On equity | 00:22:33 | |
Helen McCabe once again joins Astrid Edwards on Anonymous Was A Woman to discuss equality and equity, and of course, the latest in fiction and non-fiction. Chapter 1: Astrid and Helen consider equity (and yes, both are still in lockdown in Melbourne and Sydney). Chapter 2: Helen shares her vehement thoughts on 'The View Was Exhausting', the debut novel from couple Mikaella Clements and Onjuli Datta. Chapter 3: Astrid recommends Lucia Osborne-Crowley's memoir 'I Choose Elena' and follow up research 'My Body Keeps Your Secrets'. And don't forget, join us on Thursday to hear Jamila Rizvi in conversation with Grace-Jennins-Edquist. CHAT WITH US Join our discussion using hashtag #AnonymousWasAWomanPod and don't forget to follow Jamila (on Instagram and Twitter) and Astrid (also on Instagram and Twitter) to continue the conversation. This podcast is sponsored by Hachette Publishing and is brought to you by Future Women. The podcast is produced by Bad Producer Productions. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information. | |||
20 Jun 2021 | Growing up | 00:30:39 | |
Chapter 1: Literature used to equate adulthood with parenthood, as did society. But what counts as 'growing up' these days? Is literature changing? Chapter 2: Astrid introduces 'The Other Half of You', the new novel by Michael Mohammed Ahmed that reads as something of a love letter from a father to a son. Chapter 3: Jamila takes us through 'The Smash Up' by American author Ali Benjamin. Recommendations: Astrid recommends Lauren Hough’s 'Leaving Isn’t the Hardest Thing' (and yes, she talks about that Twitter controversy), and Jamila recommends 'The Absolutely True Diary of a Part-Time Indian' by Sherman Alexie. CHAT WITH US Join our discussion using hashtag #AnonymousWasAWomanPod and don't forget to follow Jamila (on Instagram and Twitter) and Astrid (also on Instagram and Twitter) to continue the conversation. This podcast is sponsored by Hachette Publishing and is brought to you by Future Women. The podcast is produced by Bad Producer Productions. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information. | |||
24 Feb 2021 | Louise Milligan: On authority | 00:30:36 | |
Louise Milligan is an investigative reporter for ABC TV's Four Corners and the author of Cardinal, which won the Walkley Book Award and broke massive international news preceding the court case involving one of the most senior members of the Catholic Church. Her second work is Witness: An investigation into the brutal cost of seeking justice. In this interview, Louise explains the state of our legal system and just how traumatising it can be for complainants and witnesses. Most importantly, she tells Jamila and Astrid what we can do about it. Content warning: This interview contains references to sexual assault and sexual abuse. CHAT WITH US Join our discussion using hashtag #AnonymousWasAWomanPod and don't forget to follow Jamila (on Instagram and Twitter) and Astrid (also on Instagram and Twitter) to continue the conversation. This podcast is sponsored by Hachette Publishing and is brought to you by Future Women. The podcast is produced by Bad Producer Productions. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information. | |||
23 Aug 2020 | Comfort | 00:23:40 | |
Jamila Rizvi and Astrid Edwards embrace the happier side of life this week and consider the idea of comfort. Chapter 1: Jamila and Astrid reflect on what gives them comfort in 2020 (it involves books, of course). Chapter 2: Jamila makes the case for reading The Things You Can See Only When You Slow Down: How to Be Calm and Mindful in a Fast-Paced World by Haemin Sunim. Chapter 3: Astrid recommends reading the love story Americanah by Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie - although this novel is so much more than just a love story, and it is a perfect read in the midst of 2020. Recommendations: Astrid - known for her abiding love of the fantasy genre that Jamila refuses to engage with - asks for recommendations of fantasy series written by women of colour. Meanwhile, Jamila returns to her happy place (cookbooks) and recommends Sweet by Yotam Ottolenghi and Helen Goh, as well as the novel A Gentleman in Moscow by Amos Towles. Join us on Thursday for an interview on comfort (food) with the remarkable Helen Goh. CHAT WITH US Join our discussion using hashtag #AnonymousWasAWomanPod and don't forget to follow Jamila (on Instagram and Twitter) and Astrid (also on Instagram and Twitter) to continue the conversation. This podcast is brought to you by Future Women. The podcast is produced by Bad Producer Productions. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information. | |||
30 Jun 2021 | Michael Mohammed Ahmad | 00:23:10 | |
Michael Mohammed Ahmad is the founding director of Sweatshop Literacy Movement. His debut novel, 'The Tribe', won the 2015 Sydney Morning Herald Best Young Novelists of the Year Award. His second novel, 'The Lebs', won the 2019 NSW Premier's Multicultural Literary Award and was shortlisted for the 2019 Miles Franklin Literary Award. In 2021 he has release his third novel, 'The Other Half of You'. CHAT WITH US Join our discussion using hashtag #AnonymousWasAWomanPod and don't forget to follow Jamila (on Instagram and Twitter) and Astrid (also on Instagram and Twitter) to continue the conversation. This podcast is sponsored by Hachette Publishing and is brought to you by Future Women. The podcast is produced by Bad Producer Productions. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information. | |||
27 Apr 2020 | Bonus 1: Do we ever want to be anxious when reading? | 00:06:45 | |
In our first bonus episode, Jamila Rizvi and Astrid Edwards chat about the times they enjoy being anxious when reading, and how they feel about some famous cliffhangers in literature. This bonus episode follows on from Episode 1: Anxiety. CHAT WITH US Join our discussion using hashtag #AnonymousWasAWomanPod and don't forget to follow Jamila (on Instagram and Twitter) and Astrid (also on Instagram and Twitter) to continue the conversation. This podcast is brought to you by Future Women and Penguin Random House Australia. The podcast is produced by Bad Producer Productions. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information. | |||
16 Jun 2021 | Jessica Townsend | 00:21:39 | |
Jessica Townsend is the ridiculously talented author behind the middle grade fantasy series 'The Chronicles of Morrigan Crow'. The series began in 2017 with 'Nevermoor: The Trials of Morrigan Crow'. Jessica followed up that record-breaking first instalment with 'Wundersmith: The Calling of Morrigan Crow' and 'Hollowpox: The Hunt for Morrigan Crow'. Best of all, there are six more books on the way. CHAT WITH US Join our discussion using hashtag #AnonymousWasAWomanPod and don't forget to follow Jamila (on Instagram and Twitter) and Astrid (also on Instagram and Twitter) to continue the conversation. This podcast is sponsored by Hachette Publishing and is brought to you by Future Women. The podcast is produced by Bad Producer Productions. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information. | |||
03 May 2020 | Lust | 00:40:36 | |
The fiercely intelligent Australian author Ceridwen Dovey joins Jamila Rizvi and Astrid Edwards to discuss lust in literature and non-fiction.
CHAT WITH US Join our discussion using hashtag #AnonymousWasAWomanPod and don't forget to follow Jamila (on Instagram and Twitter) and Astrid (also on Instagram and Twitter) to continue the conversation. This podcast is brought to you by Future Women and Penguin Random House Australia. The podcast is produced by Bad Producer Productions. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information. | |||
04 Aug 2021 | From the archives | Tara June Winch on solitude | 00:22:44 | |
As we wait for Season 5 we are bringing back our highest rating episodes. This interview with Tara June Winch was originally released on 20 August 2020. Tara joined Jamila and Astrid from her lockdown in France to discuss creativity and solitude. Tara was awarded the Miles Franklin Literary Award in 2020 for The Yield, and the novel was also shortlisted for The Stella Prize. In this interview, Tara reflects on the recent novel, The White Girl, written by her mentor Tony Birch (who was also shortlisted for the prize this year). Tara also considers the importance of her creative professional relationship with Behrouz Boochani (author of No Friend but the Mountains) during this period of isolation, as well as her work behind the scenes on the #sharethemicnow campaign earlier in 2020. Other Australian writers mentioned in this interview include Melissa Lucashenko, Michelle de Kretser, Claire G. Coleman and Josephine Wilson. Please note, Tara recorded this interview remotely in regional France, and her Internet connection was not great. We apologise for the audio quality, but we think Tara is worth it! CHAT WITH US Join our discussion using hashtag #AnonymousWasAWomanPod and don't forget to follow Jamila (on Instagram and Twitter) and Astrid (also on Instagram and Twitter) to continue the conversation. This podcast is brought to you by Future Women. The podcast is produced by Bad Producer Productions. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information. | |||
29 Aug 2021 | On innovation | 00:26:53 | |
Season 5 of Anonymous Was A Woman starts today. To kick off the season, Helen McCabe joins Astrid Edwards (we promise, Jamila Rizvi will be with us on Thursday). Chapter 1: We picked a happy topic to kick off the season! Helen and Astrid consider the idea of innovation, and areas where women are the ones driving the change. Chapter 2: Helen introduces the timely 'Vaxxers: The Inside Story of the Oxford AstraZeneca Vaccine and the Race Against the Virus' by Professor Sarah Gilbert and Dr Catherine Green. Chapter 3: Astrid explores 'Unwell Women: A Journey Through Medicine And Myth in a Man-Made World' by Elinor Cleghorn. And don't forget, join us on Thursday for an interview with beloved YA author Danielle Binks. CHAT WITH US Join our discussion using hashtag #AnonymousWasAWomanPod and don't forget to follow Jamila (on Instagram and Twitter) and Astrid (also on Instagram and Twitter) to continue the conversation. This podcast is sponsored by Hachette Publishing and is brought to you by Future Women. The podcast is produced by Bad Producer Productions. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information. | |||
07 Jun 2020 | Innocence | 00:40:25 | |
Jamila Rizvi and Astrid Edwards discuss childhood, innocence and growing up.
CHAT WITH US Join our discussion using hashtag #AnonymousWasAWomanPod and don't forget to follow Jamila (on Instagram and Twitter) and Astrid (also on Instagram and Twitter) to continue the conversation. This podcast is brought to you by Future Women and Penguin Random House Australia. The podcast is produced by Bad Producer Productions. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information. | |||
15 Sep 2021 | Claire Thomas and Sophie Gonzales - Melbourne Writers Festival | 00:21:49 | |
The Melbourne Writers Festival was curtailed in September 2021 because of the pandemic, so Jamila Rizvi and Astrid spoke to two of the authors who would have appeared live on stage. Claire Thomas discusses her novel 'The Performance' - an extraordinary exploration of women's inner lives that is both enthralling and profound. Sophie Gonzales reflects on her YA novel 'Only Mostly Devastated', which was recently shortlisted for the Waterstones Children's Book Prize and is a book you want to give the teenagers in your life. Stay tuned for Monday's episode, when Jamila rejoins Astrid to discuss all the latest in what they are reading. CHAT WITH US Join our discussion using hashtag #AnonymousWasAWomanPod and don't forget to follow Jamila (on Instagram and Twitter) and Astrid (also on Instagram and Twitter) to continue the conversation. This podcast is sponsored by Hachette Publishing and is brought to you by Future Women. The podcast is produced by Bad Producer Productions. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information. | |||
13 Jun 2021 | Coming of age | 00:34:49 | |
Chapter 1: Jamila and Astrid dive into the books that first made them feel ‘grown up’ and the ones that represented their shifts into adulthood. Regular listeners won’t be surprised that Astrid says her coming of age read was Stephen King’s 'It'. Jamila brings us back to the world of appropriate teenage reading by reminiscing about Melina Marchetta’s 'Looking for Alibrandi'. Chapter 2: Jamila brings Chang Rae Lee’s 'My Year Abroad' to the podcast, and she is more blunt than usual about a work of fiction. Chapter 3: And for the first time ever, Astrid recommends a rom-com - Naoise Dolan’s 'Exciting Times' (Astrid assures us it is the thinking woman's rom-com). Recommendations: Two each this week! For adults, Jamila recommends 'Dreams from my Father' by Barack Obama. Jamila then refuses to take Astrid seriously when Astrid recommends Anne Rice's 1976 classic, 'Interview with the Vampire'. Both then make recommendations for middle grade readers - Jamila brings '45 and 47 Stella Street' by Elizabeth Honey, and Astrid brings 'The Chronicles of Morrigan Crow' series from Jessica Townsend. CHAT WITH US Join our discussion using hashtag #AnonymousWasAWomanPod and don't forget to follow Jamila (on Instagram and Twitter) and Astrid (also on Instagram and Twitter) to continue the conversation. This podcast is sponsored by Hachette Publishing and is brought to you by Future Women. The podcast is produced by Bad Producer Productions. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information. | |||
08 Jun 2020 | Bonus 7: What are the kids books you adored but are now embarrassed by? | 00:07:16 | |
In our seventh bonus episode, Jamila Rizvi and Astrid Edwards reveal the children’s books they most adored when younger, as well as those they are now deeply embarrassed by. And yes, kids books have gotten so much better. This bonus episode follows on from Episode 7: Innocence. CHAT WITH US Join our discussion using hashtag #AnonymousWasAWomanPod and don't forget to follow Jamila (on Instagram and Twitter) and Astrid (also on Instagram and Twitter) to continue the conversation. This podcast is brought to you by Future Women and Penguin Random House Australia. The podcast is produced by Bad Producer Productions. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information. | |||
25 May 2020 | Bonus 5: What would your boggart be? | 00:04:17 | |
In our fifth bonus episode, Jamila Rizvi and Astrid Edwards reveal what their boggart would be. And if you aren't a Harry Potter fan, a boggart is a shape-shifting creature that takes on the form of its observer's worst fear... This bonus episode follows on from Episode 5: Fear. CHAT WITH US Join our discussion using hashtag #AnonymousWasAWomanPod and don't forget to follow Jamila (on Instagram and Twitter) and Astrid (also on Instagram and Twitter) to continue the conversation. This podcast is brought to you by Future Women and Penguin Random House Australia. The podcast is produced by Bad Producer Productions. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information. | |||
18 Mar 2024 | A new podcast for women who are told they're "too much". | 00:01:41 | |
Ask any woman and she'll tell you about a time when she was too something. At work, women are suffocated by stereotypes about who we should be and how we should behave. In FW's new podcast, Too Much, join Helen McCabe as she speaks with high-achieving women who bucked trends, disrupted systems and refused to quit. Women who built careers by forging their own paths. Episodes drop weekly.
See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information. | |||
21 Mar 2021 | Freedom | 00:25:00 | |
Jamila Rizvi and Astrid Edwards are back for the third season of Anonymous of a Woman. Chapter 1: Jamila and Astrid consider what freedom means to them - and it is the freedom to read and the freedom to write. Chapter 2: Jamila brings Colson Whitehead's The Underground Railroad - a Pulitzer Prize winning novel - to the podcast. Chapter 3: Astrid considers Eating With My Mouth Open, the debut collection by Melbourne-based Sam van Zweden. Recommendations: Jamila and Astrid reflect on one of the books they read recommended by the other. Astrid talks about The Prophets by Robert Jones Jr, and Jam does the same for I'm So Effing Tired by Dr Amy Shah. CHAT WITH US Join our discussion using hashtag #AnonymousWasAWomanPod and don't forget to follow Jamila (on Instagram and Twitter) and Astrid (also on Instagram and Twitter) to continue the conversation. This podcast is sponsored by Hachette Publishing and is brought to you by Future Women. The podcast is produced by Bad Producer Productions. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information. | |||
14 Mar 2021 | Possibility | 00:28:19 | |
Jamila Rizvi and Astrid Edwards are back for the third season of Anonymous of a Woman. Chapter 1: After weeks considering the harder topics, Jamila and Astrid strike a more positive note and look to the possibilities that may be just around the corner. Chapter 2: Astrid introduces On Hope by Daisy Jeffrey. Chapter 3: Jamila discussed Yumiko Kadota’s Emotional Female. Recommendations: Astrid recommends I'm So Effing Tired by Dr Amy Shah. Jamila recommends All the Ways To Be Smart by Davina Bell and Allison Colpoys for the kids. CHAT WITH US Join our discussion using hashtag #AnonymousWasAWomanPod and don't forget to follow Jamila (on Instagram and Twitter) and Astrid (also on Instagram and Twitter) to continue the conversation. This podcast is sponsored by Hachette Publishing and is brought to you by Future Women. The podcast is produced by Bad Producer Productions. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information. | |||
02 Sep 2020 | Kate Richards: On awe | 00:17:29 | |
Kate Richards joins Jamila Rizvi and Astrid Edwards to consider awe in life and literature. Kate is a writer of fiction and narrative nonfiction. She is the author of the critically acclaimed Madness: a memoir, the Penguin Special Is there no place for me? and Fusion. Kate also has a medical degree with honours and works in medical research in Melbourne. Join us on Monday for an episode on rage. CHAT WITH US Join our discussion using hashtag #AnonymousWasAWomanPod and don't forget to follow Jamila (on Instagram and Twitter) and Astrid (also on Instagram and Twitter) to continue the conversation. This podcast is brought to you by Future Women. The podcast is produced by Bad Producer Productions. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information. | |||
23 Jun 2021 | Kavita Bedford | 00:28:47 | |
Kavita Bedford is an Australian-Indian writer with a background in journalism and anthropology. Her first novel 'Friends and Dark Shapes' was released this year, and her short form writing has previously appeared in Guernica, the Guardian and Griffith Review. She works and teaches in Sydney in media and global studies. CHAT WITH US Join our discussion using hashtag #AnonymousWasAWomanPod and don't forget to follow Jamila (on Instagram and Twitter) and Astrid (also on Instagram and Twitter) to continue the conversation. This podcast is sponsored by Hachette Publishing and is brought to you by Future Women. The podcast is produced by Bad Producer Productions. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information. | |||
26 Jul 2020 | Bonus: Alice Pung recommends reading Melissa Lucashenko | 00:04:15 | |
In the lead up to Season 2, Jamila Rizvi and Astrid Edwards are inviting women of colour to recommend to you their favourite reads. Alice Pung recommends you dive into the works of Melissa Lucashenko. Alice suggests starting with Melissa Lucashenko's 2014 award-winning essay 'Sinking Below Sight: Down and out in Brisbane and Logan', and then move on to Too Much Lip, her novel which received the Miles Franklin Literary Award and was shortlisted for The Stella Prize in 2019. Let us know what you think and what you are reading with the hashtag #AnonymousWasAWomanPod.
CHAT WITH US Join our discussion using hashtag #AnonymousWasAWomanPod and don't forget to follow Jamila (on Instagram and Twitter) and Astrid (also on Instagram and Twitter) to continue the conversation. This podcast is brought to you by Future Women. The podcast is produced by Bad Producer Productions. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information. | |||
11 Aug 2021 | From the archives | Louise Milligan on authority | 00:30:36 | |
As we wait for Season 5 we are bringing back our highest rating episodes. This interview with Louise Milligan was originally released on 5 February 2021. Louise is an investigative reporter for ABC TV's Four Corners and the author of Cardinal, which won the Walkley Book Award and broke massive international news preceding the court case involving one of the most senior members of the Catholic Church. Her second work is Witness: An investigation into the brutal cost of seeking justice. In this interview, Louise explains the state of our legal system and just how traumatising it can be for complainants and witnesses. Most importantly, she tells Jamila and Astrid what we can do about it. Content warning: This interview contains references to sexual assault and sexual abuse. CHAT WITH US Join our discussion using hashtag #AnonymousWasAWomanPod and don't forget to follow Jamila (on Instagram and Twitter) and Astrid (also on Instagram and Twitter) to continue the conversation. This podcast is sponsored by Hachette Publishing and is brought to you by Future Women. The podcast is produced by Bad Producer Productions. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information. | |||
26 Aug 2020 | Helen Goh: On comfort (food) | 00:22:57 | |
Helen Goh joins Jamila Rizvi and Astrid Edwards from London to discuss comfort and comfort food. Helen was born in Malaysia but started her cooking career in Australia. After seven years as head pastry chef at Donovans, a landmark Melbourne restaurant, she moved to London and joined Yotam Ottolenghi's team. Helen has worked closely with Yotam as the lead product developer for over a decade, and she is the creative and comforting force behind the phenomenal cookbook Sweet. Join us on Monday for an episode on awe. CHAT WITH US Join our discussion using hashtag #AnonymousWasAWomanPod and don't forget to follow Jamila (on Instagram and Twitter) and Astrid (also on Instagram and Twitter) to continue the conversation. This podcast is brought to you by Future Women. The podcast is produced by Bad Producer Productions. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information. | |||
01 Aug 2021 | From the archives | Brit Bennett on belonging | 00:26:03 | |
As we wait for Season 5 we are bringing back our highest rating episodes. This interview with Brit Bennett was originally released on 4 February 2021. Brit is an American writer with a brilliant track record. Her debut novel The Mothers (2016) was a New York Times best-seller, as was her second novel, The Vanishing Half (2020). In this interview, Brit talks to Jamila and Astrid about her brilliant novels, and also about some big topics - passing, colourism and the state of the publishing industry. CHAT WITH US Join our discussion using hashtag #AnonymousWasAWomanPod and don't forget to follow Jamila (on Instagram and Twitter) and Astrid (also on Instagram and Twitter) to continue the conversation. This podcast is sponsored by Hachette Publishing and is brought to you by Future Women. The podcast is produced by Bad Producer Productions. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information. | |||
02 Aug 2020 | Bonus: Carly Findlay recommends reading Sara Collins & Luan Goldie | 00:10:00 | |
In the lead up to Season 2, Jamila Rizvi and Astrid Edwards are inviting women of colour to recommend to you their favourite reads. Carly Findlay, author of the memoir Say Hello and editor of the forthcoming anthology Growing Up Disabled in Australia, recommends The Confessions of Frannie Langton by Sara Collins and Nightingale Point by Luan Goldie. Let us know what you think and what you are reading with the hashtag #AnonymousWasAWomanPod.
CHAT WITH US Join our discussion using hashtag #AnonymousWasAWomanPod and don't forget to follow Jamila (on Instagram and Twitter) and Astrid (also on Instagram and Twitter) to continue the conversation. This podcast is brought to you by Future Women. The podcast is produced by Bad Producer Productions. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information. | |||
19 Sep 2021 | On darkness | 00:27:40 | |
Jamila Rizvi is back! We have missed her, and from this week Jamila is back leading our discussion of all things books. Chapter 1: As they so often do, Jamila and Astrid consider the harder things in life. This week, the theme is darkness, and they reflect on what they like to read and when. Chapter 2: Jamila introduces Jaivet Ealom's 2021 memoir, 'Escape from Manus'. Jaivet is the only person known to have escaped from Manus Island, and his life experience is truly extraordinary. Despite the darkness, this is a hopeful story. Jaivet now resides in Canada, where he is a spokesperson for the Rohingya community. Chapter 3: Astrid turns to crime fiction and considers 'I Shot the Devil' by Ruth McIver. Whilst this is very much crime fiction, it is also so much more - it is a nuanced exploration of female trauma, grief and survival. Recommendations: Astrid recommends Rachel Cusk's 'Second Place', which was shortlisted for the Booker Prize in 2021. Jamila returns to Amani Haydar's one-of-a-kind memoir, 'The Mother Wound'. Join us on Thursday for an interview with literary crime writer Mark Brandi. CHAT WITH US Join our discussion using hashtag #AnonymousWasAWomanPod and don't forget to follow Jamila (on Instagram and Twitter) and Astrid (also on Instagram and Twitter) to continue the conversation. This podcast is sponsored by Hachette Publishing and is brought to you by Future Women. The podcast is produced by Bad Producer Productions. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information. | |||
27 May 2021 | We are back for Season 4 | 00:01:24 | |
Anonymous Was A Woman with Jamila Rizvi and Astrid Edwards is a conversation on books by, and about, women. Season 4 will start on Monday 31 May 2021. CHAT WITH US Join our discussion using hashtag #AnonymousWasAWomanPod, and don't forget to follow Jamila (on Instagram and Twitter) and Astrid (also on Instagram and Twitter). This podcast is brought to you by Future Women and Hachette Australia. The podcast is produced by Bad Producer Productions. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information. | |||
06 Jun 2021 | Yesterday | 00:29:37 | |
Chapter 1: Jamila and Astrid consider why the past still matters, and why women and girls are all too often left out of the history books written by the victors. Chapter 2: Jamila brings her favourite musical - Hamilton - to life and discusses 'Hamilton: The Revolution' by Lin Manuel Miranda and Jeremy Carter. Astrid is completely out of her depth for this one. Chapter 3: Astrid reminisces about the post-World War II of her grandmother and great-grandmother and discusses 'The Husband Poisoner: Suburban women who killed in post-World War II Sydney' by Tanya Bretherton. Recommendations: Astrid recommends Hannah Kent’s 'Burial Rites'. Jamila recommends 'Wild Swans: Three Daughters of China' by Jung Chang. CHAT WITH US Join our discussion using hashtag #AnonymousWasAWomanPod and don't forget to follow Jamila (on Instagram and Twitter) and Astrid (also on Instagram and Twitter) to continue the conversation. This podcast is sponsored by Hachette Publishing and is brought to you by Future Women. The podcast is produced by Bad Producer Productions. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information. | |||
06 Sep 2020 | Rage | 00:25:00 | |
Jamila Rizvi and Astrid Edwards consider rage, who gets to be openly angry and who is expected to hide their anger away. Chapter 1: Jamila puts the word 'rageful' to good use, and Jamila and Astrid consider the last time they were truly angry. Chapter 2: Jamila considers Layla F. Saad's Me and White Supremacy: How to recognise your privilege, combat racism and change the world. Chapter 3: Astrid surprises herself and Jamila by bringing more poetry to the podcast, this time Throat by Ellen van Neerven. Recommendations: Jamila recommends Rebecca Traister’s Good and Mad: The revolutionary power of women's anger. Astrid recommends White Rage: The unspoken truth of our racial divide by Carol Anderson. Join us on Thursday for an interview on rage with rising star Cole Brown. CHAT WITH US Join our discussion using hashtag #AnonymousWasAWomanPod and don't forget to follow Jamila (on Instagram and Twitter) and Astrid (also on Instagram and Twitter) to continue the conversation. This podcast is brought to you by Future Women. The podcast is produced by Bad Producer Productions. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information. | |||
01 Sep 2021 | Danielle Binks on writing to engage young people | 00:24:22 | |
Danielle Binks is a writer, reviewer and literary agent. This year she released 'The Monster of Her Age', her debut YA novel. The Year the Maps Changed, Danielle's debut middle-grade novel, was a CBCA Notable Book for Younger Readers 2021, longlisted for the ABIA Book of the Year Award for Younger Children 2021, shortlisted for the Readings Children's Book Prize 2021 and longlisted for the Indie Book Awards 2021. In 2017, she edited and contributed to Begin, End, Begin, an anthology of new Australian young adult writing inspired by the #LoveOzYA movement, which won the ABIA Book of the Year for Older Children (Ages 13+) and was shortlisted in the 2018 Gold Inky Awards. CHAT WITH US Join our discussion using hashtag #AnonymousWasAWomanPod and don't forget to follow Jamila (on Instagram and Twitter) and Astrid (also on Instagram and Twitter) to continue the conversation. This podcast is sponsored by Hachette Publishing and is brought to you by Future Women. The podcast is produced by Bad Producer Productions. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information. | |||
14 Jun 2020 | Triumph | 00:49:15 | |
Jamila Rizvi and Astrid Edwards are joined by Min Jin Lee to discuss triumph in literature. The hero’s journey has shaped fiction since before we called it that. Is the heroine's journey different?
CHAT WITH US Join our discussion using hashtag #AnonymousWasAWomanPod and don't forget to follow Jamila (on Instagram and Twitter) and Astrid (also on Instagram and Twitter) to continue the conversation. This podcast is brought to you by Future Women and Penguin Random House Australia. The podcast is produced by Bad Producer Productions. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information. | |||
11 Jul 2021 | Hosts' pick to discuss | 00:17:58 | |
Chapter 1: Changing things up this week, Jamila and Astrid throw the idea of a weekly theme away and talk about the novels they feel like. They also both confess their love for the humble street library (particularly during lockdowns). Chapter 2: Jamila brings 'Fleishman Is in Trouble' by Taffy Brodesser-Akner to the table. Beware, there is a spoiler! Chapter 3: Astrid reflects on three novels by Favel Parrett - 'There Was Still Love', 'When the Night Comes' and 'Past the Shallows'. CHAT WITH US Join our discussion using hashtag #AnonymousWasAWomanPod and don't forget to follow Jamila (on Instagram and Twitter) and Astrid (also on Instagram and Twitter) to continue the conversation. This podcast is sponsored by Hachette Publishing and is brought to you by Future Women. The podcast is produced by Bad Producer Productions. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information. | |||
06 Oct 2021 | Mark Humphries | 00:21:44 | |
Mark Humphries is the resident satirist on ABC-TV's 7.30, and he recently published 'On Politics and Stuff' with Evan Williams. In this interview, Mark considers the role of satire in politics and tackles the question of how to satirise female politicians without being misogynist. Mark's other writing has appeared in The Guardian and the Sun-Herald, and he has previously created satirical sketches for SBS's The Feed and ABC's The Roast. CHAT WITH US Join our discussion using hashtag #AnonymousWasAWomanPod and don't forget to follow Jamila (on Instagram and Twitter) and Astrid (also on Instagram and Twitter) to continue the conversation. This podcast is sponsored by Hachette Publishing and is brought to you by Future Women. The podcast is produced by Bad Producer Productions. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information. | |||
03 Mar 2021 | Nardi Simpson: On pain | 00:21:53 | |
Nardi Simpson is a Yuwaalaraay writer, musician, composer and educator from North West NSW freshwater plains. A founding member of Indigenous folk duo Stiff Gins, Nardi has been performing nationally and internationally for 20 years. Her debut novel, Song of the Crocodile was a 2018 winner of a black&write! writing fellowship. CHAT WITH US Join our discussion using hashtag #AnonymousWasAWomanPod and don't forget to follow Jamila (on Instagram and Twitter) and Astrid (also on Instagram and Twitter) to continue the conversation. This podcast is sponsored by Hachette Publishing and is brought to you by Future Women. The podcast is produced by Bad Producer Productions. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information. | |||
02 Jun 2021 | Kate Ellis | 00:20:19 | |
Kate Ellis represented Adelaide in the Australian House of Representatives for Labor from 2004 until 2019. In the timely 'Sex, Lies and Question Time', she explores the good, the bad and the ugly of life as a woman in Australian politics. CHAT WITH US Join our discussion using hashtag #AnonymousWasAWomanPod and don't forget to follow Jamila (on Instagram and Twitter) and Astrid (also on Instagram and Twitter) to continue the conversation. This podcast is sponsored by Hachette Publishing and is brought to you by Future Women. The podcast is produced by Bad Producer Productions. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information. | |||
10 Jul 2023 | Introducing There's No Place Like Home season two | 00:03:25 | |
When it comes to domestic and family violence, it’s easy to feel helpless. But did you know that more than half of family violence victim-survivors open up to family and friends for help first?* Whether you’re worried about your own relationship, or you’re a friend, family member or a colleague - knowing subtle signs and red flags can make a big difference. Episode 1 of There’s No Place Like Home season two is now live. Episodes drop weekly.
There’s No Place Like Home is a Future Women podcast in collaboration with our proud partner, Commonwealth Bank, who are committed to helping end financial abuse through CommBank Next Chapter. No matter who you bank with, if you’re worried about your finances because of domestic and family violence, you can contact CommBank’s Next Chapter Team on 1800 222 387 within Australia or visit commbank.com.au/nextchapter. *Source: ANROWS. (2022). Transforming responses to intimate partner and sexual violence: Listening to the voices of victims, perpetrators, and services. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information. | |||
31 Jan 2021 | Belonging | 00:25:49 | |
Jamila Rizvi and Astrid Edwards are back for the third season of Anonymous Was a Woman. Chapter 1: Jamila and Astrid consider what it means to feel like you belong. Chapter 2: Jamila introduces Top End Girl, Miranda Tapsell's 2020 memoir. Chapter 3: Astrid discusses The Loudness of Unsaid Things, the debut novel by Hilde Hinton. Recommendations: Jamila recommends Rainbow Milk by Paul Mendez. Astrid recommends Growing Up Disabled in Australia, which is edited by Carly Findlay. CHAT WITH US Join our discussion using hashtag #AnonymousWasAWomanPod and don't forget to follow Jamila (on Instagram and Twitter) and Astrid (also on Instagram and Twitter) to continue the conversation. This podcast is sponsored by Hachette Publishing and is brought to you by Future Women. The podcast is produced by Bad Producer Productions. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information. | |||
08 Sep 2021 | Grace Jennings-Edquist on learning to say no | 00:28:08 | |
Grace Jennings-Edquist is a journalist at the ABC, where she writes articles on issues including gender equality and wellbeing. 'The Yes Woman: How to reclaim your power by finally saying no' is her first book. As a former senior editor at Mamamia Women’s Network, Grace has written extensively about women’s mental health for an audience of millennial Australian women. Grace’s writing has appeared widely online, including in The Guardian, Crikey, The Australian, news.com.au, New Statesman and Ms. Magazine. She has appeared on radio and television, and is the recipient of a 2018 Michael Gordon Fellowship from the Melbourne Press Club. CHAT WITH US Join our discussion using hashtag #AnonymousWasAWomanPod and don't forget to follow Jamila (on Instagram and Twitter) and Astrid (also on Instagram and Twitter) to continue the conversation. This podcast is sponsored by Hachette Publishing and is brought to you by Future Women. The podcast is produced by Bad Producer Productions. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information. | |||
10 Mar 2021 | Nadia Owusu: On barriers | 00:27:14 | |
Nadia Owusu is a Brooklyn-based writer and memoirist. Her writing has appeared in the New York Times, the Washington Post’s The Lily, Literary Review, Electric Literature, Epiphany and Catapult. Aftershocks is her first book. CHAT WITH US Join our discussion using hashtag #AnonymousWasAWomanPod and don't forget to follow Jamila (on Instagram and Twitter) and Astrid (also on Instagram and Twitter) to continue the conversation. This podcast is sponsored by Hachette Publishing and is brought to you by Future Women. The podcast is produced by Bad Producer Productions. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information. | |||
29 Sep 2021 | Annika Smethurst | 00:27:27 | |
Annika Smethurst is the state political editor at The Age newspaper in Melbourne. CHAT WITH US Join our discussion using hashtag #AnonymousWasAWomanPod and don't forget to follow Jamila (on Instagram and Twitter) and Astrid (also on Instagram and Twitter) to continue the conversation. This podcast is sponsored by Hachette Publishing and is brought to you by Future Women. The podcast is produced by Bad Producer Productions. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information. | |||
04 Jul 2021 | Fantasy | 00:25:56 | |
Chapter 1: Many of the highest-selling novels of all time are fantasy. So, why is fantasy so popular? Who is reading it? And who is writing it? Chapter 2: Astrid enters the 'Grishaverse' and explores the diversity in the 'Shadow and Bone' series from Leigh Bardugo. Chapter 3: Jamila admits to reading a fantasy book - 'The Once and Future Witches' by Alix E. Harrow - and liking it. Recommendations: Astrid returns to old favourites - Jessica Townsend's 'Nevermoor Chronicles' for middle grade readers, the 'Shadow and Bone' series for the YA audience, and N. K. Jemisin for readers of world class adult fantasy. Jamila makes the case for the enduring relevance of the Harry Potter universe (despite, ahem, J. K. Rowling herself). CHAT WITH US Join our discussion using hashtag #AnonymousWasAWomanPod and don't forget to follow Jamila (on Instagram and Twitter) and Astrid (also on Instagram and Twitter) to continue the conversation. This podcast is sponsored by Hachette Publishing and is brought to you by Future Women. The podcast is produced by Bad Producer Productions. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information. | |||
17 May 2020 | Nostalgia | 00:33:47 | |
Melina Marchetta joins Jamila Rizvi and Astrid Edwards to discuss nostalgia and the act of returning to one's favourite books.
CHAT WITH US Join our discussion using hashtag #AnonymousWasAWomanPod and don't forget to follow Jamila (on Instagram and Twitter) and Astrid (also on Instagram and Twitter) to continue the conversation. This podcast is brought to you by Future Women and Penguin Random House Australia. The podcast is produced by Bad Producer Productions. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information. | |||
30 May 2021 | Today | 00:36:51 | |
Jamila Rizvi and Astrid Edwards are back for the fourth season of Anonymous Was a Woman. Chapter 1: Changing it up, Jamila and Astrid explore time, rather than emotions, in each episode. To begin, they consider the clear and present issues of our day through the books they are reading. Chapter 2: Jamila brings 'How Good Is Scott Morrison?' by Peter van Onselen and Wayne Errington to the table... and Astrid is not convinced. Chapter 3: Astrid introduces Jamie Marina Lau's spectacular second work of fiction, 'Gunk Baby'. Definitely find a copy of this one for your to-be-read pile! Recommendations: For those experiencing climate grief, Astrid recommends Jonica Newby's 'Beyond Climate Grief: A journey of love, snow, fire and an enchanted beer can'. Jamila (finally) embraces pandemic literature and suggests 'The Rationing' by Charles Wheelan. CHAT WITH US Join our discussion using hashtag #AnonymousWasAWomanPod and don't forget to follow Jamila (on Instagram and Twitter) and Astrid (also on Instagram and Twitter) to continue the conversation. This podcast is sponsored by Hachette Publishing and is brought to you by Future Women. The podcast is produced by Bad Producer Productions. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information. | |||
10 Feb 2021 | Kylie Maslen: On confusion | 00:21:20 | |
Kylie Maslen's debut, Show Me Where It Hurts: Living with invisible illness, is a revelation. Released in late 2020, in early 2021 the work has already been shortlisted for the Victorian Premier's Literary Awards. In this interview, Kylie talks to Jamila and Astrid about navigating the confusing complexities of chronic illness - in relationships, in professional life, and in the health system itself. CHAT WITH US Join our discussion using hashtag #AnonymousWasAWomanPod and don't forget to follow Jamila (on Instagram and Twitter) and Astrid (also on Instagram and Twitter) to continue the conversation. This podcast is sponsored by Hachette Publishing and is brought to you by Future Women. The podcast is produced by Bad Producer Productions. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information. | |||
17 Mar 2021 | Sarah Krasnostein: On possibility | 00:22:44 | |
Sarah Krasnostein is the best-selling author of The Trauma Cleaner: One Woman's Extraordinary Life in Death, Decay and Disaster, as well as her 2021 work The Believer: Encounters with Love, Death and Faith. The Trauma Cleaner was awarded the Victorian Prize for Literature, the Victorian Premier’s Prize for Non- Fiction, the Australian Book Industry Award for General Non-Fiction and the Dobbie Literary Award. It jointly won the Douglas Stewart Prize for non-fiction at the NSW Premier’s Literary Awards, was longlisted for the Walkley Book Award and was shortlisted for the National Biography Award, the Melbourne Prize for Literature and the Wellcome Book Prize (UK). CHAT WITH US Join our discussion using hashtag #AnonymousWasAWomanPod and don't forget to follow Jamila (on Instagram and Twitter) and Astrid (also on Instagram and Twitter) to continue the conversation. This podcast is sponsored by Hachette Publishing and is brought to you by Future Women. The podcast is produced by Bad Producer Productions. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information. | |||
16 Sep 2020 | Maxine Beneba Clarke: On determination | 00:21:30 | |
Maxine Beneba Clarke joins Jamila Rizvi and Astrid Edwards to consider creativity and determination. Maxine is a phenomenally talented Australian writer of Afro-Caribbean descent. Her works include her memoir The Hate Race (which received the NSW Premier's Literary Award Multicultural NSW Award 2017 and was shortlisted for an ABIA, an Indie Award, the Victorian Premier's Literary Awards and Stella Prize) and the short fiction collection Foreign Soil (which received the ABIA for Literary Fiction Book of the Year and the Indie Book Award for Debut Fiction, and was shortlisted for the Matt Richell Award for New Writing and the Stella Prize). Join us on Monday for an episode on momentum. CHAT WITH US Join our discussion using hashtag #AnonymousWasAWomanPod and don't forget to follow Jamila (on Instagram and Twitter) and Astrid (also on Instagram and Twitter) to continue the conversation. This podcast is brought to you by Future Women. The podcast is produced by Bad Producer Productions. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information. | |||
07 Feb 2021 | Confusion | 00:31:13 | |
Jamila Rizvi and Astrid Edwards are back for the third season of Anonymous of a Woman. Chapter 1: Jamila and Astrid consider confusion, and how books - especially self-help books - can sometimes be just what you need. Chapter 2: Astrid introduces Celeste Ng’s Little Fires Everywhere. Chapter 3: Jamila explores Sanjay Gupta's Keep Sharp: Build a Better Brain at Any Age. Recommendations: Astrid gets rather excited about The Ministry for the Future by Kim Stanley Robinson. Jamila recommends More than a Woman by Caitlin Moran. CHAT WITH US Join our discussion using hashtag #AnonymousWasAWomanPod and don't forget to follow Jamila (on Instagram and Twitter) and Astrid (also on Instagram and Twitter) to continue the conversation. This podcast is sponsored by Hachette Publishing and is brought to you by Future Women. The podcast is produced by Bad Producer Productions. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information. | |||
03 Oct 2021 | Our favourites | 00:30:26 | |
This week Jamila Rizvi and Astrid Edwards are bring their favourites to the table, and they are joined by Future Women favourite Madison Howarth. Chapter 1: Everyone brought memoir this week! So to kick off the episode, Jamila, Astrid and Madi reflect on how memoir has changed over the last decade (for the better, as we are seeing fewer formal autobiographies and more stories of lived experience being published). Chapter 2: Jamila suggests reading 'All About Yves: Notes from a transition' by Yves Rees. Chapter 3: Astrid still wants everyone to read anything by Claire G. Coleman, and in this episode discusses Claire's first non-fiction book 'Lies Damned Lies: A personal exploration of the impact of colonisation'. Recommendations: Jamila recommends Maxine Beneba Clarke's memoir 'The Hate Race', as well as 'Mao's Last Dancer' by Li Cunxin. Madi recommends 'Dark Emu' by Bruce Pascoe, as well as 'I Know Why the Caged Bird Sings' by Maya Angelou. Join us on Thursday for an interview with satirist Mark Humphries. CHAT WITH US Join our discussion using hashtag #AnonymousWasAWomanPod and don't forget to follow Jamila (on Instagram and Twitter) and Astrid (also on Instagram and Twitter) to continue the conversation. This podcast is sponsored by Hachette Publishing and is brought to you by Future Women. The podcast is produced by Bad Producer Productions. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information. | |||
28 Feb 2021 | Pain | 00:27:48 | |
Jamila Rizvi and Astrid Edwards are back for the third season of Anonymous of a Woman. Chapter 1: After the recent events in Australia's Parliament house, Jamila and Astrid threw what they were going to talk about out the window and instead made space to recognise the pain of survivors of sexual assault and sexual abuse. Chapter 2: Astrid takes us back to Hamnet by Maggie O'Farrell. Chapter 3: Jamila grows emotional over The Prophets by Robert Jones, Jr. Recommendations: Jamila and Astrid recommend books by survivors, and books written by journalists about survivors. These are some of the books that have affected them deeply, and there are many more books by survivors that they would love you to recommend to them.
Content warning: This interview contains references to sexual assault and sexual abuse. CHAT WITH US Join our discussion using hashtag #AnonymousWasAWomanPod and don't forget to follow Jamila (on Instagram and Twitter) and Astrid (also on Instagram and Twitter) to continue the conversation. This podcast is sponsored by Hachette Publishing and is brought to you by Future Women. The podcast is produced by Bad Producer Productions. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information. | |||
31 May 2020 | Loneliness | 00:37:09 | |
Writer and comedian Rosie Waterland joins Jamila Rizvi and Astrid Edwards to discuss loneliness.
CHAT WITH US Join our discussion using hashtag #AnonymousWasAWomanPod and don't forget to follow Jamila (on Instagram and Twitter) and Astrid (also on Instagram and Twitter) to continue the conversation. This podcast is brought to you by Future Women and Penguin Random House Australia. The podcast is produced by Bad Producer Productions. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information. | |||
30 Sep 2020 | Rebecca Huntley: On fortitude | 00:23:49 | |
Rebecca Huntley joins Jamila Rizvi and Astrid Edwards to consider fortitude, and specifically where we find it and how we use it to address the climate crisis. Rebecca is one of Australia's most experienced social researchers and former director of The Mind and Mood Report, the longest running measure of the nation's attitudes and trends. She is a member of Al Gore's Climate Reality Corps, carries out social research for NGOs such as The Wilderness Society and WWF, and writes and presents for the ABC. Her latest book is How To Talk About Climate Change In A Way That Makes A Difference. Join us on Monday for an episode on justice. CHAT WITH US Join our discussion using hashtag #AnonymousWasAWomanPod and don't forget to follow Jamila (on Instagram and Twitter) and Astrid (also on Instagram and Twitter) to continue the conversation. This podcast is brought to you by Future Women. The podcast is produced by Bad Producer Productions. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information. | |||
11 May 2020 | Bonus 3: Where do you feel seen in literature? | 00:08:55 | |
In our third bonus episode, Jamila Rizvi and Astrid Edwards name the characters who forced them to consider the world from another viewpoint, as well as the ones whose experience made them feel seen. Again, this is a little embarrassing for both of them. This bonus episode follows on from Episode 3: Solidarity. CHAT WITH US Join our discussion using hashtag #AnonymousWasAWomanPod and don't forget to follow Jamila (on Instagram and Twitter) and Astrid (also on Instagram and Twitter) to continue the conversation. This podcast is brought to you by Future Women and Penguin Random House Australia. The podcast is produced by Bad Producer Productions. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information. | |||
21 Jul 2021 | Norman Swan | 00:21:35 | |
Dr Norman Swan was one of the first medically qualified journalists in Australia, with a broadcast career spanning more than 30 years. He hosts Radio National's The Health Report and co-hosts Coronacast. 'So You Think You Know What Is Good For You?' is his first book. CHAT WITH US Join our discussion using hashtag #AnonymousWasAWomanPod and don't forget to follow Jamila (on Instagram and Twitter) and Astrid (also on Instagram and Twitter) to continue the conversation. This podcast is sponsored by Hachette Publishing and is brought to you by Future Women. The podcast is produced by Bad Producer Productions. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information. | |||
27 Sep 2020 | Fortitude | 00:29:02 | |
Jamila Rizvi and Astrid Edwards explore the concept of fortitude in both life and literature. Chapter 1: Jamila and Astrid consider what fortitude means to them. Chapter 2: Jamila brings back The White Girl, the award-winning 2019 novel by Tony Birch. Chapter 3: Astrid ponders A Better Death: Conversations about the Art of Living and Dying Well by Dr Ranjana Srivastava. Recommendations: Astrid recommends Show Me Where It Hurts: Living with invisible illness by Kylie Maslen. Jamila introduces Untold Resilience: Stories of courage, survival and love from women who have gone before. Join us on Thursday for an interview on fortitude with Rebcca Huntley. CHAT WITH US Join our discussion using hashtag #AnonymousWasAWomanPod and don't forget to follow Jamila (on Instagram and Twitter) and Astrid (also on Instagram and Twitter) to continue the conversation. This podcast is brought to you by Future Women. The podcast is produced by Bad Producer Productions. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information. | |||
23 Sep 2020 | Angela Saini: On momentum | 00:21:48 | |
Angela Saini joins Jamila Rizvi and Astrid Edwards to consider momentum for change, particularly in relation to science and what we consider fact. Angela is an award-winning science journalist, author and broadcaster. Her latest book, Superior: The Return of Race Science was published in 2019 and was a finalist for the LA Times Book Prize and the Foyles Book of the Year. Her previous book, Inferior: How science got women wrong, was published in 2017 and received the Physics World Book of the Year. Angela presents radio and television programmes for the BBC, and her writing also appears in New Scientist, Prospect, The Sunday Times, Wired, and National Geographic. Join us on Monday for an episode on fortitude. CHAT WITH US Join our discussion using hashtag #AnonymousWasAWomanPod and don't forget to follow Jamila (on Instagram and Twitter) and Astrid (also on Instagram and Twitter) to continue the conversation. This podcast is brought to you by Future Women. The podcast is produced by Bad Producer Productions. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information. | |||
09 Jun 2021 | Anita Heiss | 00:23:01 | |
Dr Anita Heiss is an award-winning author of non-fiction, historical fiction, commercial women’s fiction, children’s novels and blogs. Her latest work is 'Bila Yarrudhanggalangdhuray', and it is the first commercial work published with only Aboriginal language on the cover in Australia. Anita is a proud member of the Wiradjuri Nation of central New South Wales and an Ambassador for the Indigenous Literacy Foundation. CHAT WITH US Join our discussion using hashtag #AnonymousWasAWomanPod and don't forget to follow Jamila (on Instagram and Twitter) and Astrid (also on Instagram and Twitter) to continue the conversation. This podcast is sponsored by Hachette Publishing and is brought to you by Future Women. The podcast is produced by Bad Producer Productions. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information. | |||
18 May 2020 | Bonus 4: What books will we be nostalgic about? | 00:05:31 | |
In our fourth bonus episode, Jamila Rizvi and Astrid Edwards project forwards thirty years and consider the books being published today that might evoke nostalgia in our future. This bonus episode follows on from Episode 4: Nostalgia. CHAT WITH US Join our discussion using hashtag #AnonymousWasAWomanPod and don't forget to follow Jamila (on Instagram and Twitter) and Astrid (also on Instagram and Twitter) to continue the conversation. This podcast is brought to you by Future Women and Penguin Random House Australia. The podcast is produced by Bad Producer Productions. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information. | |||
15 Jun 2020 | Bonus: Which female character would you befriend at the end of the world? | 00:08:05 | |
In our final bonus episode, Jamila Rizvi and Astrid Edwards consider the female characters from literature they would want to befriend at the end of the world. And yes, they have very different understandings of what the end of the world might look like. This bonus episode follows on from Episode 8: Triumph. CHAT WITH US Join our discussion using hashtag #AnonymousWasAWomanPod and don't forget to follow Jamila (on Instagram and Twitter) and Astrid (also on Instagram and Twitter) to continue the conversation. This podcast is brought to you by Future Women and Penguin Random House Australia. The podcast is produced by Bad Producer Productions. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information. | |||
24 Mar 2021 | Glyn Davis: On freedom | 00:25:38 | |
Glyn Davis AC is CEO of the Paul Ramsay Foundation, which works to end intergenerational poverty. He was previously Vice Chancellor of the University of Melbourne and remains Distinguished Professor of political science at the Australian National University. With one in eight adults and one in six children living below the poverty line in Australia, in On Life's Lottery Glyn Davis asks the question: If life is a game of chance, what responsibility do those who are given a head start have to look after those less fortunate? CHAT WITH US Join our discussion using hashtag #AnonymousWasAWomanPod and don't forget to follow Jamila (on Instagram and Twitter) and Astrid (also on Instagram and Twitter) to continue the conversation. This podcast is sponsored by Hachette Publishing and is brought to you by Future Women. The podcast is produced by Bad Producer Productions. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information. | |||
19 Aug 2020 | Tara June Winch: On solitude | 00:22:44 | |
Tara June Winch joins Jamila Rizvi and Astrid Edwards from her lockdown in France to discuss creativity and solitude. Tara was awarded the Miles Franklin Literary Award in 2020 for The Yield, and the novel was also shortlisted for The Stella Prize. In this interview, Tara reflects on the recent novel, The White Girl, written by her mentor Tony Birch (who was also shortlisted for the prize this year). Tara also considers the importance of her creative professional relationship with Behrouz Boochani (author of No Friend but the Mountains) during this period of isolation, as well as her work behind the scenes on the #sharethemicnow campaign earlier in 2020. Other Australian writers mentioned in this interview include Melissa Lucashenko, Michelle de Kretser, Claire G. Coleman and Josephine Wilson. Please note, Tara recorded this interview remotely in regional France, and her Internet connection was not great. We apologise for the audio quality, but we think Tara is worth it! Join us on Monday for an episode on comfort. CHAT WITH US Join our discussion using hashtag #AnonymousWasAWomanPod and don't forget to follow Jamila (on Instagram and Twitter) and Astrid (also on Instagram and Twitter) to continue the conversation. This podcast is brought to you by Future Women. The podcast is produced by Bad Producer Productions. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information. | |||
26 Sep 2021 | On politics | 00:26:05 | |
Once again, Jamila Rizvi and Astrid Edwards consider the world through the lens of reading and books. Chapter 1: So, what is politics and why does it matter? And what do books have to do with politics anyway? Chapter 2: Jamila delights in revisiting the revised and updated edition of Julia Baird's 'Media Tarts'. Chapter 3: Astrid presents Marion Wilkinson's 'The Carbon Club: How a network of influential climate sceptics, politicians and business leaders fought to control Australia's climate policy' and explains why it should be one of the few books that should stay in print for decades. Recommendations: Jamila gushes over the biography of Bob Hawke 'Wednesdays with Bob', written by Derek Rielly and Bob Hawke himself. Astrid brings some light into her reading choices and recommends 'The Future We Choose: The stubborn optimist's guide to the climate crisis' by Christiana Figueres and Tom Rivett-Carnac. Join us on Thursday for an interview with journalist and reporter Annika Smethurst. CHAT WITH US Join our discussion using hashtag #AnonymousWasAWomanPod and don't forget to follow Jamila (on Instagram and Twitter) and Astrid (also on Instagram and Twitter) to continue the conversation. This podcast is sponsored by Hachette Publishing and is brought to you by Future Women. The podcast is produced by Bad Producer Productions. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information. | |||
20 Oct 2021 | Aja Barber | 00:29:33 | |
Aja Barber has pledged to never take a dollar from fast fashion, and in her 2021 book 'Consumed' she explains why. She is passionate about racial justice and exposing endemic injustices in our consumer and fashion industries. Aja is also no stranger to campaigning for change. Her Instagram video 'Why Performative Allyship is Triggering', which called out brands and influencers for monetising the Black Lives Matter movement, has accumulated over one million views. The video also put a spotlight on the disparity between fast fashion brand billionaires and their unpaid factory workers during the Covid-19 economic downturn. CHAT WITH US Join our discussion using hashtag #AnonymousWasAWomanPod and don't forget to follow Jamila (on Instagram and Twitter) and Astrid (also on Instagram and Twitter) to continue the conversation. This podcast is sponsored by Hachette Publishing and is brought to you by Future Women. The podcast is produced by Bad Producer Productions. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information. | |||
30 Aug 2020 | Awe | 00:21:50 | |
Jamila Rizvi and Astrid Edwards consider awe - awe of the little things in our daily lives, as well as awe of the bigger things that may change us. Chapter 1: Jamila and Astrid unpick what they each understand awe to be. Chapter 2: Jamila goes deep on Julia Baird's Phosphorescence, a work that reminds us all about the lightness and joy we can find in daily life. Chapter 3: Astrid explains how Arundhati Roy's novel The God of Small Things and polemic The Cost of Living changed her life twenty years ago. Recommendations: Astrid recommends all of the poetry by Ali Cobby Eckermann, especially ‘Ruby Moonlight’. Jamila takes a deep breath and recommends 'When Breath Becomes Air' by Paul Kalanithi. Join us on Thursday for an interview on awe with the unforgettable Kate Richards. CHAT WITH US Join our discussion using hashtag #AnonymousWasAWomanPod and don't forget to follow Jamila (on Instagram and Twitter) and Astrid (also on Instagram and Twitter) to continue the conversation. This podcast is brought to you by Future Women. The podcast is produced by Bad Producer Productions. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information. | |||
17 Aug 2021 | Introducing 'Drive' from Future Women | 00:01:05 | |
Join journalist and presenter, Leila McKinnon, as she chats to inspirational women who are living their lives, their way. Find out what drives them; the lessons they've learned; and the ones they wish they'd known earlier. Subscribe now or search for 'Future Women Drive' wherever you get your podcasts. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information. | |||
14 Jul 2021 | Bri Lee | 00:26:07 | |
Bri Lee is an author and freelance writer. Her first book, Eggshell Skull, won Biography of the Year at the ABIA Awards, the People's Choice Award at the Victorian Premier's Literary Awards, and was longlisted for the Stella Prize. Her latest work, Who Gets To Be Smart: Privilege, Power and Knowledge tackles the inequity in our eduction system. Her journalism has also appeared in publications such as The Monthly, The Saturday Paper, Guardian Australia and Crikey. CHAT WITH US Join our discussion using hashtag #AnonymousWasAWomanPod and don't forget to follow Jamila (on Instagram and Twitter) and Astrid (also on Instagram and Twitter) to continue the conversation. This podcast is sponsored by Hachette Publishing and is brought to you by Future Women. The podcast is produced by Bad Producer Productions. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information. | |||
10 Oct 2021 | Her Story | 00:27:20 | |
This week Jamila Rizvi and Astrid Edwards are joined by Future Women's Ella Jackson. Chapter 1: Jamila, Astrid and Ella consider the different ways women choose to tell their own stories, and the stories of those who have come before them. Chapter 2: Jamila brings Lucy Adlington's historical fiction novel 'The Dressmakers of Auschwitz' to the podcast. Chapter 3: This week Astrid chooses a non-fiction read and recommends 'My Life in Full: Work, family, and our future' by Indra Nooyi (the first female CEO of PepsiCo!). Join us on Thursday for an interview with journalist Lisa Millar. CHAT WITH US Join our discussion using hashtag #AnonymousWasAWomanPod and don't forget to follow Jamila (on Instagram and Twitter) and Astrid (also on Instagram and Twitter) to continue the conversation. This podcast is sponsored by Hachette Publishing and is brought to you by Future Women. The podcast is produced by Bad Producer Productions. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information. | |||
16 Aug 2020 | Solitude | 00:28:59 | |
Jamila Rizvi and Astrid Edwards are back with Season 2 of Anonymous Was A Woman. Chapter 1: First up, Jamila and Astrid consider the idea of solitude and creativity in 2020. Chapter 2: Jamila and Astrid take a look back at Virginia’s Woolf’s A Room of One’s Own (a quote from which serves as the name of the podcast). How does the work stack up in 2020, and what else could we be reading (hint, we should all read Women, Race and Class by Angela Y. Davis and Talkin’ Up to the White Woman by Aileen Moreton-Robinson)? Chapter 3: Staying with the idea of creativity in solitude, Astrid looks forward to the release of Fire, Flood and Plague (an Australian anthology edited by Sophie Cunningham), with excerpts currently published in The Guardian. Jamila introduces Together in a Sudden Strangeness (a poetry anthology edited by Alice Quinn in the United States). Recommendations: Astrid recommends The Life to Come by Michelle de Kretser. Jamila is currently cooking non-stop and recommends Yotam Ottolenghi’s Flavour, Gizzi Erskine’s Slow: Food worth taking time over and Sami Tamimi’s Falastin: A cookbook. Join us on Thursday for an interview on solitude with Wiradjuri author Tara June Winch. CHAT WITH US Join our discussion using hashtag #AnonymousWasAWomanPod and don't forget to follow Jamila (on Instagram and Twitter) and Astrid (also on Instagram and Twitter) to continue the conversation. This podcast is brought to you by Future Women. The podcast is produced by Bad Producer Productions. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information. | |||
19 Jul 2020 | Special episode: A reading audit - How good a reader are you? | 00:41:24 | |
In the lead up to Season 2, Jamila Rizvi and Astrid Edwards are back with a special episode featuring Jan Fran, Leah Purcell and Jessie Tu.
CHAT WITH US Join our discussion using hashtag #AnonymousWasAWomanPod and don't forget to follow Jamila (on Instagram and Twitter) and Astrid (also on Instagram and Twitter) to continue the conversation. This podcast is brought to you by Future Women. The podcast is produced by Bad Producer Productions. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information. | |||
21 Feb 2021 | Authority | 00:28:03 | |
Jamila Rizvi and Astrid Edwards are back for the third season of Anonymous of a Woman. Chapter 1: Is there a bigger question in our current age than who do we trust and why? Jamila and Astrid consider what authority means to them these days. Chapter 2: Jamila reflects on When We Say Black Lives Matter, the recent illustrated kids book from podcast favourite Maxine Beneba Clarke. Chapter 3: Astrid dives deep into Noreena Hertz's The Lonely Century: Coming together in a world that's pulling apart, a nonfiction work that is uncannily timely. Recommendations: Jamila and Astrid finally agree on recommendations! Astrid advocates for the literary merit of Barack Obama's A Promised Land, while Jamila goes for an old favourite suitable for the teenagers (and adults) in your life, George Orwell's Animal Farm. CHAT WITH US Join our discussion using hashtag #AnonymousWasAWomanPod and don't forget to follow Jamila (on Instagram and Twitter) and Astrid (also on Instagram and Twitter) to continue the conversation. This podcast is sponsored by Hachette Publishing and is brought to you by Future Women. The podcast is produced by Bad Producer Productions. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information. | |||
22 Sep 2021 | Mark Brandi | 00:22:11 | |
Mark Brandi is an award-winning writer of literary crime. His stories tend to focus on the darkness in the world as experienced from young or disadvantaged protagonists. 'The Others' is his third - and perhaps most haunting - novel. Mark's bestselling novel, 'Wimmera', won the coveted British Crime Writers' Association Debut Dagger, and was named Best Debut at the 2018 Australian Indie Book Awards. It was also shortlisted for the Australian Book Industry Awards Literary Fiction Book of the Year, and the Matt Richell Award for New Writer of the Year. His second novel, 'The Rip', was also published to critical acclaim. Mark graduated with a criminal justice degree and worked extensively in the justice system, before changing direction and deciding to write. Originally from Italy, he grew up in rural Victoria. His shorter work has appeared in The Guardian, The Age, the Big Issue, and in journals both here and overseas. His writing is also sometimes heard on ABC Radio National. CHAT WITH US Join our discussion using hashtag #AnonymousWasAWomanPod and don't forget to follow Jamila (on Instagram and Twitter) and Astrid (also on Instagram and Twitter) to continue the conversation. This podcast is sponsored by Hachette Publishing and is brought to you by Future Women. The podcast is produced by Bad Producer Productions. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information. | |||
14 Feb 2021 | Love | 00:25:10 | |
Jamila Rizvi and Astrid Edwards are back for the third season of Anonymous of a Woman. Chapter 1: In this Valentine week of Hallmark cards and awkward dates, Jamila and Astrid talk about love - the real, lasting, messy and sometimes boring kind that’s only rarely found on the page. Chapter 2: Jamila introduces Brodie Lancaster's memoir No Way! Okay, Fine. Chapter 3: Astrid makes the case for the lasting relevance of Esther Perel's 2006 work Mating in Captivity: Unlocking Erotic Intelligence. Recommendations: Jamila recommends an awfully long list of love stories from the Western Canon, and Astrid goes with the non-heteronormative intergalactic love story The Old Lie from Claire G. Coleman. CHAT WITH US Join our discussion using hashtag #AnonymousWasAWomanPod and don't forget to follow Jamila (on Instagram and Twitter) and Astrid (also on Instagram and Twitter) to continue the conversation. This podcast is sponsored by Hachette Publishing and is brought to you by Future Women. The podcast is produced by Bad Producer Productions. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information. | |||
04 Mar 2020 | Welcome to Anonymous Was A Woman | 00:01:33 | |
Anonymous Was A Woman with Jamila Rizvi and Astrid Edwards is a conversation on books by, and about, women. Join our discussion using hashtag #AnonymousWasAWomanPod, and don't forget to follow Jamila (on Instagram and Twitter) and Astrid (also on Instagram and Twitter). This podcast is brought to you by Future Women and Penguin Random House Australia. The podcast is produced by Bad Producer Productions. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information. | |||
30 Nov 2020 | Bonus: Christmas Special 2020 | 00:20:44 | |
Have a grumpy uncle you need to buy a Christmas gift for? Or what about your mum who has read everything already? Or do you want something uplifting for the person you love who is struggling? Jamila Rizvi and Astrid Edwards are here to help with all the Christmas book recommendations you need (and probably some that you don't). To buy or read more about the books discussed in this episode, visit https://www.hachette.com.au/collections/future-women-festive-special And in other news, Anonymous Was A Woman will be back throughout 2021 thanks to Hachette Publishing. Our first episode to kick off the year will be released in late January 2021. Subscribe so you don’t miss it! CHAT WITH US Join our discussion using hashtag #AnonymousWasAWomanPod and don't forget to follow Jamila (on Instagram and Twitter) and Astrid (also on Instagram and Twitter) to continue the conversation. This podcast is brought to you by Future Women and Hachette Australia. The podcast is produced by Bad Producer Productions. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information. | |||
13 Sep 2020 | Determination | 00:29:01 | |
Jamila Rizvi and Astrid Edwards consider the determination of characters, authors and survivors to go beyond the page and have an impact on the real world. Chapter 1: How determined do Jamila and Astrid feel, both in lockdown in Melbourne, during this, the longest and saddest of years? Chapter 2: Astrid introduces the new dystopian literary thriller from Kate Mildenhall, The Mother Fault. Chapter 3: Jamila explores The Vanishing Half, the latest novel from Brit Bennet, whose standout debut The Mothers earned great acclaim. Recommendations: Astrid throws back to Season 1 and recommends Wolfe Island by Lucy Treloar and The Glad Shout by Alice Robinson as the perfect reading accompaniments to The Mother Fault. Jamila also brings back a recommendation from Season 1 - Chanel Miller's Know My Name. Jamila also introduces The Space Between, a new book from Michelle Andrews and Zara McDonald. Join us on Thursday for an interview on determination with Maxine Beneba Clarke. CHAT WITH US Join our discussion using hashtag #AnonymousWasAWomanPod and don't forget to follow Jamila (on Instagram and Twitter) and Astrid (also on Instagram and Twitter) to continue the conversation. This podcast is brought to you by Future Women. The podcast is produced by Bad Producer Productions. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information. | |||
17 Oct 2021 | On sustainability | 00:32:47 | |
This week Jamila Rizvi and Astrid Edwards are joined by Future Women's Bojana Kos. Chapter 1: Jamila asks whether or not books can help drive our understanding of sustainability, and Astrid takes issues with the term itself. Chapter 2: Jamila brings Ash Davidson's powerful debut, 'Damnation Spring' to the podcast. Chapter 3: Astrid once again picks a non-fiction work and recommends 'Under a White Sky: The nature of the future' by Pulitzer-prize winning writer Elizabeth Kolbert. Join us on Thursday for an interview with the brilliant Aja Barber. CHAT WITH US Join our discussion using hashtag #AnonymousWasAWomanPod and don't forget to follow Jamila (on Instagram and Twitter) and Astrid (also on Instagram and Twitter) to continue the conversation. This podcast is sponsored by Hachette Publishing and is brought to you by Future Women. The podcast is produced by Bad Producer Productions. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information. | |||
01 Jun 2020 | Bonus 6: Who is the loneliest character in literature? | 00:06:00 | |
In our sixth bonus episode, Jamila Rizvi and Astrid Edwards consider who the loneliest character in literature may be. This bonus episode follows on from Episode 6: Loneliness. CHAT WITH US Join our discussion using hashtag #AnonymousWasAWomanPod and don't forget to follow Jamila (on Instagram and Twitter) and Astrid (also on Instagram and Twitter) to continue the conversation. This podcast is brought to you by Future Women and Penguin Random House Australia. The podcast is produced by Bad Producer Productions. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information. |