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Lecture: Attributes of Identity-in Conversation
Title:
Lecture: Attributes of Identity-in Conversation
When:
07.09.2013 18.00 h
Where:
The Wheeler Centre - Melbourne
Category:
Education

Description

The Antipodes Festival, in collaboration with the Food for Thought Greek Australian Women’s Network, presents: A Conversation with Justice Emilios Kyrou.

Justice Kyrou will discuss the themes of motivation and preserving the Greek heritage and will then be interviewed by Eyvah Dafaranos (poet and wife of the Greek Ambassador) on his migrant experience, his role as the first and only Greek-born Justice of the Supreme Court of Victoria and aspects of his recently published autobiography Call Me Emilios. The evening’s moderator, Professor Nikos Papastergiadis (The University of Melbourne), and Helen Nickas (Editor and Publisher) will then contribute their reflections and the Greek Ambassador, Haris Dafaranos, will make closing remarks.


About Justice Emilios Kyrou
Justice Emilios Kyrou is a Justice of the Supreme Court of Victoria, having been appointed in May 2008. He was born the village of Sfikia, near Veria in northern Greece, and migrated to Australia with his parents and younger brother in 1968 when he was 8 years old. He graduated from The University of Melbourne in 1982 with a first class honours degree in law and a commerce degree. He was the top law graduate and was awarded the prestigious Supreme Court Prize.

Call Me Emilios, published in 2012, is Justice Kyrou’s highly personal exploration of identity, and the determination that transformed him from a vulnerable new migrant to a successful lawyer and ultimately a Supreme Court Judge. Part family history, the book provides a window to the many hardships that motivated an entire generation of Greek migrants to succeed in Australian society, while maintaining their Greek heritage. The book also considers the enormous impact that Australia, a country Justice Kyrou describes as “one of the few true meritocracies in the world”, has had on his life, offering deep gratitude for the many opportunities it has presented him.

Free Admission. Bookings are essential.
To reserve a place click here.

For further information contact:
This e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it | 9662 2722

Read reviews of Justice Kyrou’s autobiography Call Me Emilios:
The Age (28.11.2012)
The Australian (6.7.2013)
Neos Kosmos (24.11.2012)
Law Institute Journal (11.2012)
Australian Jewish News (29.3.2013)
Victorian Bar News (12.2012)

Venue

Venue:
The Wheeler Centre   -   Website
Street:
176 Little Lonsdale Street
Postcode:
3000
Suburb:
Melbourne
State:
VIC
Country:
Country: au

The Wheeler Centre

A Victorian Government initiative and the centrepiece of Melbourne’s designation as a UNESCO City of Literature.

Our City of Literature status is not about Dickens on the tram, Nabokov in the Great Southern Stand or a Bronte or two over breakfast. It’s a recognition and celebration of Melbourne’s passionate readers.

We’re home to many of Australia’s best and best-loved writers, past and present. We host an extraordinary network of booksellers, a diverse publishing culture and a vibrant community of thinkers.

Being a City of Literature is about engagement locally and globally. Because there’s a public conversation going on: in our papers and online, on our TVs and radios, in our workplaces and homes. Books, writing and ideas flow through Melbourne and there is something for everyone.

Melbourne has a new kind of cultural institution. The Wheeler Centre – a centre dedicated to the discussion and practice of writing and ideas. Through a year-round programme of talks and lectures, readings and debates, we invite you to join the conversation.

Alphington Grammar Koinotika Nea - the Greek Community newsletter Requirements for Greek Citizenship

 

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