Impact Studios and The Sydney Review of Books

In this episode, we return to Roland Barthes’ famous 1967 essay, The Death of the Author. This influential text is often taught as an anti-authoritarian gesture, shifting the power of meaning from the author to the reader. But what happens when we consider Barthes’ ideas alongside the voices of anticolonial writers who, at the same historical moment, were mobilising literature to galvanise communities against oppression?
We explore what these debates reveal about contemporary writing’s tendency to blur authorial fact with fiction, and why questions of agency still matter today. The conversation is sparked by Michael Griffiths’ new book, The Death of the Author and Anticolonial Thought, and was recorded live at UTS’ Centre for the Advancement of Indigenous Knowledges.
Michael Griffiths – Author of The Death of the Author and Anticolonial Thought, Michael is a scholar whose work explores intersections between literary theory and postcolonial studies.
Ben Etherington – Academic and writer with expertise in world literature and cultural theory.
Elizabeth McMahon – Scholar and author focusing on literature, identity, and critical theory.
Graham Akhurst – Academic and author whose work engages with Indigenous storytelling and creative practice.
Credits
This live event was recorded on Gadigal land, live, at UTS’ Centre for the Advancement of Indigenous Knowledges on November 27.
The event was produced and recorded by Ben Etherington.
Fully Lit is an Impact Studios podcast, made in collaboration with the Sydney Review of Books.
Its producer is Regina Botros.
Executive producers are Sarah Gilbert and James Jiang.