On the contrary

Comedy, cancellation and killing your ego

Featured in

  • Published 20241105
  • ISBN: 978-1-923213-01-2
  • Extent: 196 pp
  • Paperback, ebook, PDF

Australian novelist Lexi Freiman knows how to walk a literary tightrope. Her fiction is both savagely funny and strikingly empathetic, daring to satirise the hot-­button issues of identity politics and cancel culture without eliding the complex motivations that underpin them. In her 2018 debut Inappropriation, which was longlisted for the Miles Franklin Award, a trio of schoolgirls spectacularly misunderstand Donna Haraway’s Cyborg Manifesto; in 2023’s The Book of Ayn, which saw Freiman interviewed on The Daily Show in the US, a newly cancelled writer finds herself radicalised by the work of notorious iconoclast Ayn Rand. In both novels, Freiman dextrously uses satire and absurdity to illuminate the complications and contradictions of selfhood in contemporary culture.

In this conversation – a condensed and lightly edited version of a 2024 Brisbane Writers Festival session – Lexi talks to Griffith Review Editor Carody Culver about the allure of contrarianism, the necessary selfishness of creativity and the importance of a good joke.

Already a subscriber? Sign in here

If you are an educator or student wishing to access content for study purposes please contact us at griffithreview@griffith.edu.au

Share article

About the author

Lexi Freiman

Lexi Freiman is the author of the novels The Book of Ayn and Inappropriation, longlisted for the Center for Fiction First Novel Prize and the Miles Franklin...

More from this edition

Land, sea and sky

Non-fiction YOU CAN ONLY imagine what it would have been like. On 1 July 1871, the warrior chief Dabad and his men stood and watched...

Tawny child

FictionCarefully, Morgan loosened the fabric. The crying increased in volume. Eventually, the small dark head of a bawling, tawny child emerged into the clear light. Morgan looked at the child with her eyes narrowed and her lips pursed, as if she were considering an heirloom of unknown value. Hans took the envelope from the fingers of the man in the blue suit and tore the gold seal. Inside were five crisp, dry banknotes. The man in the blue suit told them that such payments would be forthcoming every month, and that the child’s name was Many-­gift in the local dialect, but they were to refer to him as Albert and raise him as their own.

Believe it or not

IntroductionCultural critic Chuck Klosterman reminds us that ‘any present-tense version of the world is unstable. What we currently consider to be true – both objectively and subjectively – is habitually provisional.’

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