Skip to main content

School of History

Research Centres

Australian Centre for Indigenous History

Centre for Environmental History

National Centre of Biography

  • Home
  • About us
    • Support us
    • Contact us
  • People
    • Director
    • Academics
    • Professional staff
    • Research officers
    • Visitors
      • Past visitors
    • Current PhD students
    • Graduated PhD students
    • ADB Editorial Board
    • ADB Working Parties
    • ADB Editorial Fellows
  • Events
    • Biography workshop
  • News
    • Media
  • Study with us
  • Research projects
    • First Three Fleets and their Families
    • Colonial women in the Australian Dictionary of Biography
    • Dictionary of the House of Representatives
    • Great Expectations: Sydney College 1835-50
  • Publications
    • Biography Footnotes
    • Biography Series, ANU Press
    • Australian Journal of Biography and History
    • NCB News
    • Life Sentences

ARC Laureate Program

Resources

  • Australian Dictionary of Biography
  • Obituaries Australia
  • People Australia
  • Digitised Biographies

School of History

  • Back to School main pages

Related Sites

  • ANU College of Arts & Social Sciences
  • Research School of Social Sciences
  • Australian National Internships Program
  • Australian Journey
  • One Hundred Stories

Administrator

Breadcrumb

HomeWelcome To The National Centre of BiographyNCB Upcoming Events‘Reading Biographies To Overcome Loneliness’: Reflections of An Accidental Biographer
‘Reading biographies to overcome loneliness’: Reflections of an accidental biographer

Frank Moorhouse (1938–2022) is best known as a writer of literary fiction. All of his fiction is connected, with his many books sharing characters and experiences, including across generations, and covering much of the 20th century: one of the most sustained feats of the imagination in Australia’s literary history. This alone would warrant a closer look at Moorhouse, but at the same time, he was part of a generation that overturned federal censorship, and through a series of landmark legal cases – most notably the copyright case of the early 1970s – he contributed toward establishing much of the literary infrastructure that we take for granted today – and which we are currently at risk of losing. Moorhouse also had a colourful and complicated personal life, the full extent of which – together with his writing and intellectual life, his political and literary advocacy – could only be justly addressed in a biographical narrative form. In this Biography Workshop Matthew Lamb will reflect on the challenges faced and the choices made trying to contain these multitudes in such a narrative form, and the lessons learned about the nature of literary biography.

Matthew Lamb is the author of Frank Moorhouse: Strange Paths (Knopf, 2023), the first in a projected two volume cultural biography of Frank Moorhouse. He is a former editor of Review of Australian Fiction and Island magazines and has two PhDs, in literature and philosophy. He currently writes the Public Things Newsletter on the relationship between literary culture and democracy.

Date & time

  • Thu 26 Jun 2025, 11:00 am - 12:30 pm

Location

Seminar room 6.71, RSSS Building, 146 Ellery Crescent AND Zoom bit.ly/BioWorkshop2022

Speakers

  • Dr Matthew Lamb

Event Series

Biography Workshop

Contact

  •  Dr Stephen Wilks
     Send email
     (02) 6125 2349