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Going West Festival

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Episodes

Women Then, Women Now | Wāhine o Mua, Wāhine o Nāianei
21-03-2021
Women Then, Women Now | Wāhine o Mua, Wāhine o Nāianei
Women in Aotearoa New Zealand. Five leading women meet in the 125th year since the 1893 granting of female suffrage in New Zealand.  Feminists Fiona Kidman, Sandra Coney, Lizzie Marvelly, and Golriz Ghahraman join Carol Hirschfeld to explore the position of women in Aotearoa now. What’s led us here, what’s changed, what hasn’t, and what’s still to be done?The session brought together a diverse range of women with a wealth of lived experience. A self-confessed radical feminist and pioneer of the women’s rights movement, a literary legend with more than 30 published books, an Iranian born NZ human rights lawyer and Green MP, an award-winning columnist and campaigner for presenting credible information on sex, sexuality and relationships. Together, they  talked with a current affairs maestro on the legacy of female suffrage in New Zealand and what it means to grow up feminist in Aotearoa. Hirschfeld introduced this 2018 Going West session, in a venue packed to capacity, with the following provocation: “Just a year before Kate Shepphard and her fellow suffragists achieved the vote, the electoral law in New Zealand excluded women from the definition of ‘person’. So, when we cast our minds back, what do you think these suffragists would think about where we’re at, and what we’re proud of”.The Women Then, Women Now session was inspired by the publication of Women Now: The Legacy of Female Suffrage, which featured essays from Coney, Kidman and Ghahraman; and Marvelley’s That F Word: Growing Up Feminist in Aotearoa.This podcast contains a brief but explicit discussion of sexual practices
Diana Wichtel: Driving to Treblinka
12-03-2021
Diana Wichtel: Driving to Treblinka
In 2017, Going West was the first festival to invite award winning journalist Diana Wichtel to talk about her newly published memoir Driving to Treblinka: a long search for a lost father.  It would go on to rave reviews, awards and accolades. It tells the story of her father Ben Wichtel, a Polish Jew who was rounded up by the Nazis but jumped to safety from a train on the way to the Treblinka death camp. But later in life, now a father and husband, he would simply disappear. As one reviewer said this is a story that “will make all who read it a better human being”. It is an ode to remembering; to never stop fighting against forgetting. Reviewers declared it the best non-fiction book of the year and won both a 2018 Ockham Award for Non-fiction and the E H. McCormack Best First Book Award for Non-fiction. At Going West, Diana appeared in conversation with her long-time friend, colleague, and fellow writer Steve Braunias.Steve regards Diana as a writer of genius and considered the book to be something truly exceptional. “Diana knew something of her Dad’s story, and not much more as a little girl growing up in Canada. Her Mum was a Kiwi.  The family immigrated to NZ in the 1960s, but Ben stayed behind, and Ben suffered, and Ben became a kind of ghost, alive, then dead, his story barely remembered. That’s the thing about life, it just gets on with it, but history has a way of creeping up on you and making demands, and Driving to Treblinka is a record of Diana’s journey to the past.  It’s profoundly moving... It’s beautifully written, it allows for a lot of black comedy, and it’s a wonderfully told story, from a writer who is really without parallel in this country.”
From a Certain Point of View
10-12-2020
From a Certain Point of View
This session from the Going West Festival in 2018 explores creative non-fiction. Award winning novelist, essayist, academic, teacher of creative writing and the founder of the Academy of New Zealand Literature Paula Morris leads a lively discussion on writing true stories, and the demands and possibilities of the essay form and creative non-fiction at a time of upheaval and transformation in the media and publishing landscape. She describes her fellow panelists as “all distinguished, all opinionated and all very good non-fiction writers”.  Joining her on stage are journalist, writer and editor Simon Wilson, Susanna Andrew of Unity Books, who is an accomplished editor and reviewer, and economics essayist Shamubeel Eaqub, to discuss non-fiction writing and reading in Aotearoa.Paula Morris Award winning novelist, short story writer, essayist, teacher and academicIn 2018 she published an essay and short story collection called False River.Simon Wilson Editor of The Journal of Urgent Writing. Award winning journalist, former editor at Metro, former Auckland editor at The Spinoff, Senior Writer at the New Zealand Herald.Susanna Andrew Co-editor with Jolisa Gracewood of Tell You What: Best New Zealand nonfiction. Reader, reviewer, editor (bookseller at Unity Books). Instigator of ‘True Stories Told Live’ events at the NZ Book Council, convenor of judges for the non-fiction prize for the NZ Book AwardsShamubeel Eaqub Economist, author and columnist, economics essayist. Writer of three Bridget Williams Books Text series titles: Generation Rent, Economic Futures, Growing Apart: Regional Prosperity in New Zealand, and with AUP co-wrote with Ralph Lattimore, The New Zealand Economy: An Introduction
The Slings and Arrows of Outrageous Fortune
19-11-2020
The Slings and Arrows of Outrageous Fortune
In 2009, as part of an afternoon celebrating Waitakere City and West Auckland, Going West guests heard the story of iconic New Zealand television series Outrageous Fortune and the fictional West family of West Auckland. The multi-award winning creative team of Rachel Lang and James Griffin, along with actor Robyn Malcolm (Cheryl West), were joined in conversation by Auckland Theatre Company founder, actor and director Simon Prast.This session also celebrated the publication of Outrageous Fortune: the West Family Album, a book by Rachel Lang, James Griffin and Tim Balme, published by West Auckland publisher Peter Dowling of Oratia Media.Outrageous Fortune was created for Henderson-based South Pacific Pictures and ran on TV3 from 2005 to 2010. It is the longest running drama series made in New Zealand, and one of the few embraced by an Australian audience. It spawned a US and an English version, and even aired in Eastern Europe.Starting in 2015, TV3 screened a spinoff series, Westside. Set in the 1970s and 80s, the series followed the younger years of key characters Ted and Rita West. The final episode played on November 16 2020, bringing to a close the West family television saga. Both Outrageous Fortune and Westside shamelessly championed New Zealand music, starting with its use of Westie favourite Gutter Black (by Hello Sailor) as its theme music. Both series also featured buildings and locations across West Auckland, including the brick and tile West family residence in Te Atatu South.
Salt Beef and the Farmer’s Ordinary
12-11-2020
Salt Beef and the Farmer’s Ordinary
As keynote seeker at the 2007 Going West Festival, Tony Simpson spoke to the festival theme Food for Thought. An award-winning social historian, food critic, writer on; food history, the working class, post-modern scones, 19th century immigration and a political journalist, Simpson’s talk reveals the story of colonial cuisine and its impact on New Zealand’s food traditions and our cultural identity.He notes that many British farm labourers and their families who immigrated to New Zealand in the late 19th century (and who had eaten a monotonous steerage diet of ‘salt beef’ and dried potatoes at sea) had experience of famine. They had also known full bellies at the annual harvest home feast and had witnessed, if not partaken in, the ‘farmer’s ordinary’, a hearty midday dinner traditionally served to farmers at the local Inn. This was a meal of thick soup, roast meat, large helpings of veg and potatoes, a sweet pie or pudding with lashings of cream, and followed by cheese. They had known what it was to be hungry and they were determined not to be, if they could possibly help it in their new home, bringing with them the desire to be self-sustaining domestically through their land holding. This was true even for the urban working class on their now near-mythical ‘Kiwi quarter-acre section’, with its home vege garden, fruit trees and chook house. This was a tradition that lasted in New Zealand for a century. In light of the shifts that Simpson highlights, and with the land limitations of the modern urban apartment dweller, perhaps it’s time to lobby local councils for public garden allotments and fruit trees in parks, so the self-sustaining dream can be realised for a new century?For food assistance, or if you would like to donate or volunteer, contact foodbank.co.nz
Words Between Us -- He Kōrero
01-10-2020
Words Between Us -- He Kōrero
This session from Going West 2011 is based on an exhibition and subsequent award winning publication Words Between Us -  He Kōrero by Alison Jones and Kuni Kaa Jenkins, which won the 2012 Ngā Kupu Ora Māori Book Awards. Both the exhibition and the book traced the first Māori conversations on paper from 1769  to 1835. As the authors’ wrote, “it is hard to imagine the shock experienced by Māori who first heard written words spoken in the local language. The startling fact about writing was that Pākehā marks could ‘say’ Māori words; Pākehā texts could have Māori meaning.”As the speakers note, the first book ever printed in New Zealand was in Māori. Alison Jones is a professor at Te Puna Wānanga, the School of Māori and Indigenous Education, University of Auckland and was awarded the NZARE McKenzie Award in December 2011 for her significant contribution to educational research. She has worked with Māori scholars and students in the field of education for 25 years and has a fascination with the complexities of Māori and Pākehā educational relationships. She has written a number of books in the area of sociology of education and Māori education.Kuni Jenkins is a professor with Te Whare Wānanga o Awanuiārangi where she teaches and conducts research. She has had a long-term interest in literacy, and her PhD involved archival study of early Māori written documents and the relationships between Māori and Pākehā. She has written a number of books in the area of sociology of education and Māori education.The session is introduced by Rose Yukich, a Going West Trustee and academic at the University of Auckland.