TM logo

The Monthly | Australian politics, society & culture

Essays  Right arrow

Politics

Labor’s first extinction

State and federal governments have protected Tasmania’s foreign-owned salmon industry, and the imminent loss of the Maugean skate exposes the price of such state capture

Labor’s first extinction
Dutton’s nuclear power plants

Federal politics

Dutton’s nuclear power plants

The conservative charity group figures driving the opposition leader’s pivot to nuclear energy

The rights stuff

Law and order

The rights stuff

The brilliant career of human rights lawyer Jennifer Robinson, legal adviser to Julian Assange

A common good

Society

A common good

In the age of the individual, are we losing our understanding of the collective and our sense of shared humanity?


The Nation Reviewed  Right arrow

Attorney-General Mark Dreyfus exiting the House of Reps, Parliament House, behind PM Anthony Albanese

Federal politics

Seeing through the government

The Albanese government made promises on transparency, but its use of FOI and NDAs is still disturbingly widespread

Illustration by Jeff Fisher

Law and order

A jury of her peers

Equal access to jury service has a short history, and it’s still unbalanced by gender divisions in domestic labour

Illustration by Jeff Fisher

Dream homes

Flood-prone houses are being demolished across Brisbane’s riverside suburbs, leaving unnervingly uniform blocks of bright green grass

Illustration by Jeff Fisher

Form and beauty

A visit to a life-drawing class at Arts Project Australia, where artists living with an intellectual disability are developing professional careers

Vox  Right arrow

The Vox Owl

A letter to Gillian Mears

The author’s correspondence with his late friend and colleague on the finer points of boiling water for tea

Arts & Letters  Right arrow

Sanders Place interior showing trees growing in garden within concrete floor

Architecture

Box office hit: Sanders Place

NMBW Architecture Studio’s innovative inner-Melbourne office conversion exposes the true cost of Modernism’s ‘less is more’

scene from Chunky Move, ‘You, Beauty’, with dancers embracing within folds of billowing pink fabric

Dance

Within the veil: Chunky Move’s ‘You, Beauty’

Artistic director Antony Hamilton’s latest work, debuting at Rising festival, envelops the audience within its massive inflatable set

Jan Senbergs, ‘Col Madigan leaves the Armidale’

Art

The big easel: The life and work of Jan Senbergs

The film director remembers his friend and brother-in-law, the celebrated Latvian-Australian fine artist and printmaker

Noted  Right arrow

Cover of ‘Deep Water: The World in the Ocean’

Books

James Bradley’s ‘Deep Water’

The novelist and essayist’s revelatory exploration of the ocean depths goes beyond science to offer historical, cultural and moral contexts

Cover of ‘36 Ways of Writing a Vietnamese Poem’

Books

Nam Le’s ‘36 Ways of Writing a Vietnamese Poem’

The writer’s long-awaited return is a poetry collection that probes the risks of reclaiming histories of colonial traumas

Life sentences Right arrow

Flowers being watered

‘Everything that made the kernel of his life, was hidden from other people’

The author’s lifelong embrace of solitude and small enclosed spaces is reflected in a line from Chekhov

Online Latest  Right arrow

Naomi Watts as Babe Paley in ‘Feud: Capote vs. The Swans’

Television

‘Feud – Capote vs. The Swans’ delivers camp absurdity

Plus, Ukraine through its people’s eyes, new Australian comedy on show, and ‘Shōgun’ returns in full gory glory

Osamah Sami with members of his local mosque

Television

In ‘House of Gods’, Sydney’s Muslim community gets to be complicated

Plus, Barnaby Joyce shines in ‘Nemesis’, Emma Seligman and Rachel Sennott deliver ‘Bottoms’, and Chloë Sevigny and Molly Ringwald step up for ‘Feud: Capote vs. The Swans’.

International Film Festival Rotterdam highlights

Film

International Film Festival Rotterdam highlights

Films from Iran, Ukraine and Bundaberg were deserving winners at this year’s festival

Two women on a train smile and shake hands

Television

‘Expats’ drills down on Hong Kong’s class divide

Plus, Netflix swallows Trent Dalton, Deborah Mailman remains in ‘Total Control’ and ‘Vanderpump Rules’ returns for another season

Podcasts  Right arrow

7am

Jess Hill on why we need more than ‘awareness’ to end the killing of women

Author of See What You Made Me Do and journalist Jess Hill, on what can be done to stop the violence – and why “awareness” is no longer good enough.

HOST Ashlynne McGhee
GUEST Jess Hill

7am

How sales reps infiltrated operating theatres

National correspondent for The Saturday Paper Mike Seccombe, on whether the pursuit of profit risks driving clinical decisions.

HOST Ashlynne McGhee
GUEST Mike Seccombe

7am

‘A race towards minority’: Inside Labor’s re-election strategy

Special correspondent in Canberra for The Saturday Paper Jason Koutsoukis, on why Labor appears so calm in turbulent times.

HOST Ashlynne McGhee
GUEST Jason Koutsoukis