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    calibre essay prize

    Explore " calibre essay prize" with insightful episodes like "'The Morning Belongs to Us', an essay by Siobhan Kavanagh", "2023 Calibre Essay runner-up Bridget Vincent with 'Child Adjacent'", "Linda Atkins on the politics and economics of abortion" and "Simon Tedeschi reads his 2022 Calibre Prize-winning essay, ‘This woman my grandmother’" from podcasts like ""The ABR Podcast", "The ABR Podcast", "The ABR Podcast" and "The ABR Podcast"" and more!

    Episodes (4)

    'The Morning Belongs to Us', an essay by Siobhan Kavanagh

    'The Morning Belongs to Us', an essay by Siobhan Kavanagh

    This ABR Podcast features one of the eleven shortlisted entries in the 2023 Calibre Essay Prize, ‘The Morning Belongs to Us’, by Siobhan Kavanagh. The 2024 Calibre Essay Prize, worth a total of $10,000, is now open for entries and will be closed on the 22nd of January 2024. Full details can be found on the ABR website. Listen to Siobhan Kavanagh’s ‘The Morning Belongs to Us’, published in the November issue of ABR.

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    2023 Calibre Essay runner-up Bridget Vincent with 'Child Adjacent'

    2023 Calibre Essay runner-up Bridget Vincent with 'Child Adjacent'

    In this week’s ABR podcast we hear from the runner-up of the 2023 Calibre Essay Prize, Bridget Vincent. Calibre judges Yves Rees, Peter Rose and Beejay Silcox praised Bridget Vincent’s ‘Child Adjacent’ for its wryness and compassion. They noted that it broadened our understanding of the family and interrogated the terrors and moral dilemmas of raising children in the climate crisis. Bridget Vincent is a Lecturer in English at the Australian National University. Listen to her reading ‘Child Adjacent’, published in the June issue of ABR.

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    Linda Atkins on the politics and economics of abortion

    Linda Atkins on the politics and economics of abortion

    The leaked draft judgment in the case of Dobbs v. Jackson Women’s Health Organization, in which US Supreme Court Justice Samuel Alito proposed overturning the precedent set by Roe v. Wade, has returned abortion rights to the headlines. In this week’s episode of The ABR Podcast, Linda Atkins reads her essay, ‘Shouting Abortion’, which sets women’s right to terminations within the broader context of intergenerational poverty and the class lines of the medical profession. As personal as it is political, Atkins’ piece offers an unvarnished account of abortion from both sides of the operating table.

    Linda Atkins is an obstetrician, married with three children. ‘Shouting Abortion’ was shortlisted in this year’s Calibre Essay Prize.

    This commentary is generously supported by the Judith Neilson Institute for Journalism and Ideas.

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    Simon Tedeschi reads his 2022 Calibre Prize-winning essay, ‘This woman my grandmother’

    Simon Tedeschi reads his 2022 Calibre Prize-winning essay, ‘This woman my grandmother’

    Shortly before Simon Tedeschi’s grandmother, Lucy Gershwin, died sixteen years ago, she recorded a memoir of her wartime years. Gershwin, a Polish Jew, was the only survivor of a family obliterated by the Nazis during the Holocaust. Tedeschi’s powerful essay, ‘This woman my grandmother’, reflects on the moment he decided to read her memoirs and encounter the tragic outlines of a life that remains shaded by a reticence typical of her generation. It’s a thoroughly deserving winner of the Calibre Essay Prize, now in its sixteenth year and one of the world’s leading prizes for an original essay. The judges – critics Beejay Silcox and Declan Fry and Peter Rose, Editor of ABR – chose ‘This woman my grandmother’ from a field of almost 600 entries from 17 different countries. We publish ‘This woman my grandmother’ in our May issue. In this week’s podcast, Simon Tedeschi reads his winning essay.

    Simon Tedeschi is one of Australia’s most renowned classical pianists. He commenced piano studies when he was six and gave his first concerto performance at the age of eight, at the Sydney Opera House. He has performed with all the major Australian state orchestras, as well as many overseas, and he has released a number of recordings through Sony and ABC Classics. His first book, Fugitive, is now available from Upswell.

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