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AWAYE! - Separate stories podcast

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AWAYE! - Separate stories podcast

A weekly Society and Culture podcast
Good podcast? Give it some love!
AWAYE! - Separate stories podcast

ABC listen

AWAYE! - Separate stories podcast

Episodes
AWAYE! - Separate stories podcast

ABC listen

AWAYE! - Separate stories podcast

A weekly Society and Culture podcast
Good podcast? Give it some love!
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Episodes of AWAYE!

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Mulanjali person Ellen van Neervan is one of the most celebrated writers in the country. Now they're ready to debut their first play: swim.It follows genderfluid protagonist E and muses on everything from  the sovereignty of water to gender id
Each year the National NAIDOC Lifetime Achievement Award is given to someone who’s advocacy has left an indelible mark. This year, Aunty Dulcie Flower AM is being awarded the honour. She’s a co-founder of the Aboriginal Medical Service, played
Mulanjali person Ellen van Neervan is one of the most celebrated writers in the country. Their first book 'Heat and Light' won the David Unaipon Award, the Dobbie Literary Award and the NSW Premier’s Literary Awards Indigenous Writers’ Prize.
Henry Augustine is a community broadcaster based in Beagle Bay. To kick off his stint on Word Up, Henry shares a Nyul Nyul word meaning 'I' or 'me', and explains how he came to learn Nyul Nyul. 
Each year the National NAIDOC Lifetime Achievement Award is given to someone who’s advocacy has left an indelible mark. This year, Aunty Dulcie Flower AM is being awarded the honour. She’s represented the interests of her community on a nation
Join Carina Norman and Jasmine Seymour in the Sydney area where they're working to strengthen the Dharug language. For their final time on Word Up, they share some different ways to farewell someone Dharug Country.
Before colonisation, more than 250 languages were used across Australia. Now, only 40 Indigenous languages are still spoken fluently.Without intervention, that number will continue to drop.Bart Pigram, Vincent McKenzie and Samantha Armstrong s
Bangarra alumna Deborah Brown joined forces with leading Māori choreographer and Arts Laureate Moss Te Ururangi Patterson have united to create 'The Light Inside' -  a powerful homage to home.It’s the primary piece of Bangarra Dance Theatre’s
The National Indigenous Art Fair will return to The Rocks on Gadigal land at the end of the month. Works from the Bula'bula weavers and Pupunya’s Western Desert artists will be among more than 50 stalls selling artwork, handmade jewellery, hom
Carina Norman and Jasmine Seymour share the Dharug word for Country, camp or nest.
Until recently, Dharug was considered a sleeping language, but grassroots activists like Carina Norman and Jasmine Seymour have set about having the language taught in schools. Today, they share a Dharug word which means ‘to look’ and discuss
Ziggy Ramo's latest work, Human? A lie that has been killing us since 1788, attempts to bridge a nation-wide knowledge gap. One he says stems from the lie that 97 per cent of the population of so-called Australia are human, and the rest of us
Violinist and vocalist Eric Avery has shared the stage with artists like Tina Arena, Yo-Yo Ma, and the Black Arm Band.But how have these experiences shaped his composition work?Ahead of his performance at Monash University Performing Arts Cent
First performed in 1998, Stolen by Jane Harrison follows the story of five members of the Stolen Generation, each navigating a world that has sought to erase their cultural identity. But what does that story say to an audience in 2024?Director
Today Corina Norman and Jasmine Seymour share a Dharug word that can be used to scold, or to show love.
In the 1960s, a Gurindji boy was adopted under government policy by a white English family and taken to live in a remote hamlet in the UK. He spent the rest of his life there – struggling with displacement, identity and isolation until he died
Electric Fields is the name of the electronic pop and soul duo Michael Ross and Zaachariaha Fielding. Michael Ross says the intention Electric Fields sets is the same now as it was when the duo first spoke to AWAYE! in 2016. 
The Blak arts community recently said goodbye to a pioneer.Celebrate the late, great Destiny Deacon by listening back to her 2004 AWAYE! interview with Tess Allas.
Head to Dharug Country in the Sydney area to meet Carina Norman and Jasmine Seymour.They share a Dharug greeting.
Head to Dharug Country in the Sydney area to meet Karina Norman and Jasmine Seymour.They share a Dharug greeting.
Word Up takes you back Ngemba Country in Far West NSW to meet Phil Sullivan who shares the word he uses to describe his home as well as some thoughts on recognising each other's humanity. 
The conwoman, the sociopathic girl-boss, the apathetic sad woman, and the femme avenger. When it comes to popular culture, we’re in the era of the female anti-hero. Finally, women are allowed to be bad.But in the real world, are some women giv
Elena MacDonald is a descendant of the Paredarerme Nation, and the sectary of the Parrdarrama Pungenna Aboriginal CorporationShe and her community have been working to bring greater awareness of the diversity that exists in Aboriginal Tasmania
Phil Sullivan is a Ngemba man from Bourke, and our language legend for this month. He explains the link between language and identity, and share a word he uses to address multiple people at once.
Stone Motherless Cold and Cerulean are preparing to bring one of their biggest drag productions to life — ECLIPSE.Together they discuss the show, what sets First Nations drag apart and who is the real kween of Naarm.
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