Featured Stories

Latest Edition

Lost and Found

Edition 92
'Loss,' wrote Marcus Aurelius, 'is nothing else but change'. We lose face, lose time, lose heart, lose touch, lose ground, lose our keys (often); we can lose the things that hold us back or weigh us down, just as...

Featured Collection

First Nations Perspectives

We've put together a collection of essays by leading First Nations writers, thinkers and activists that explore the long road to Indigenous representation.
These works are all unlocked and free to read.

Where truths collide

I AM SITTING forward, in nautical terms, looking astern at my awa, who is guiding us through reefs and straits on a moonless night. Above him are stars like phosphorescence in the squid-ink sky. Around his silhouette I see phosphorescence like stars in our small dinghy’s wake. I’m a young man excited to be going night-spearing for kaiyar, the painted crayfish.

Speaking up

The modern Australian incarnation of truth-telling that emerged from the Uluru Statement from the Heart in 2017 came not from dictatorship and civil war, as had truth-telling in the Latin American ‘radical democracies’ of the 1990s, which pioneered transitional justice. Instead, it derived from local people devising local solutions.

The power of the First Nations Matriarchy

I WAS BORN from the world’s most ancient womb: the sacred womb of a First Nations woman. The blood pumping through my veins is the life force of a long line of First Nations Warrior Women whose spirits run deep into this ancient soil. It is a privilege to be raised in a culture that understands the power of the First Nations Matriarchy.

When the heart speaks

I had in mind what Australia should be as I wrote the book, a gift to the peoples’ movement for legal, political and structural change in this country – the movement to establish a constitutionally enshrined First Nations Voice to Parliament, as proposed in the Uluru Statement from the Heart.

The heart of seeding First Nations sovereignty

The demand for treaty – or, more accurately, the demand for many treaties – must be driven by the cultural authority of each sovereign First Nation. This process must be underpinned by cultural protocol and custom that recognises the many tribal clans within the First Nations.

The long road to Uluru

Uluru is a game changer. The response of ordinary Australians to the Statement has been overwhelming…a rallying call to the Australian people to “walk with us in a movement…for a better future”.

GR Online - Free to read

A landscape photograph of wild grass by a lake

Cruising the stranger

Editors note: this essay is a critical response to Stranger by the Lake and therefore contains spoilers.A CAR PULLS into a dusty, sun-drenched carpark. The driver, Franck, is a handsome…

Safe haven

WHEN I TURNED sixteen, I began investigating murder trials involving gay male victims. This may not sound like your typical hobby for a teenage boy growing up in Tasmania during…

Tough love

I GREW UP on a steady diet of fantasy novels. Anything vaguely Arthurian was my jam. By the time I was fourteen, I had read the back catalogues of Stephen…

Our souls aglow

LIKE MANY WRITERS, I find the idea of re-reading my past work torturous. Once I’m done with a piece, I desperately try to usher it out of my memory. Unfortunately,…

Stay up to date with the latest news, articles and special offers from Griffith Review.

Recent Editions