Festival of Dangerous Ideas
The Festival of Dangerous Ideas (FODI) is a disruptive festival that encourages debate and critical thinking, co-founded in 2009 by The Ethics Centre (formerly known as the St James Ethics Centre)[1] the Sydney Opera House.
2009-2017
The festival was presented at Sydney Opera House for eight years.
When created, the festival aimed to bring leading thinkers and culture creators from around Australia and the world to discuss and debate some of the most important issues of our time.
In the inaugural 2009 event, the festival's opening address was given by atheism advocate Christopher Hitchens on the topic of "Religion Poisons Everything", which was countered by Australian Roman Catholic Cardinal George Pell in a session titled "Without God We Are Nothing".[2]
The 2010 program featured talks by Geoffrey Robertson, Alan Dershowitz, Christian Lander and Lenore Skenazy.
The 2011 Festival featured Julian Assange, Jonathan Safran Foer, Alexander McCall Smith, Jon Ronson, Slavoj Žižek, Mona Eltahawy and Philip Nitschke.
The 2012 Festival speakers included: Sam Harris, Germaine Greer, Brian Morris, Tara Moss, Illan Pappe, Jason Silva, Shiv Malik, Ed Howker, Jane Bussmann, Jesse Bering and Tim Harford.
In 2013, speakers included Arlie Hochschild, David Simon, Hanna Rosin, Evgeny Morozov, Vandana Shiva, Dan Savage, John Safran and Peter Hitchens.
In 2014, speakers included Sir Salman Rushdie, Nadya Tolokonnikova and Masha Alekhina (Pussy Riot), Masha Gessen, Steven Pinker, Elizabeth Kolbert, Rebecca Newberger Goldstein, Malcolm Fraser, Lydia Cacho, Alissa Nutting, Tim Flannery and Mark Latham.
In 2015, the seventh Festival of Dangerous Ideas was made up of solo sessions and panels featuring speakers such as Tariq Ali, Naomi Klein, Peter Greste, Gabriella Coleman, Sarai Walker, AC Grayling, Marc Lewis, Paul Krugman, Laurie Penny, Jon Ronson, Eric Schlosser and Gideon Raff. For the first time, FODI Melbourne also took place as part of the Melbourne Writers Festival.
In 2016, the final Festival of Dangerous Ideas was held at the Sydney Opera House. It featured speakers such as Jesse Bering, Andrew Bolt, Molly Crabapple, Alicia Garza (Black Lives Matter), Henry Rollins (Black Flag) and Lionel Shriver.
In 2017 the Sydney Opera House announced that it was no longer presenting the Festival of Dangerous Ideas. It announced ANTIDOTE: a festival of art, ideas and action featuring speakers such as Janet Mock, Reni Eddo-Lodge, Tamika D. Mallory (Women's March on Washington) and Micah M. White (Occupy Wall Street) and artists such as Noemi Lakmaier, Anne Collod and Kaleider.
2018-present
In 2018 the Festival of Dangerous Ideas was independently presented by The Ethics Centre on Cockatoo Island.[3]
In 2018, upon the Festival at Cockatoo Island for two days of discussions on internet sub-cultures, fascism, privacy and LSD. Plus, there was a special event at Sydney Town Hall with Stephen Fry. Speakers included Niall Ferguson, Pankaj Mishra, Megan Phelps-Roper, Zeynup Tufecki, Seth Stephens-Davidowitz, Ayelet Waldman, Germaine Greer, Toby Walsh, Nikki Goldstein and Xanthe Mallett.
The 2018 festival also saw the inaugural Festival of Dangerous Art which included artists Betty Grumble, Garth Knight and Riley Harmon.
Controversies
The 2014 Festival was criticised due to the links between the St James Ethics Centre and companies that profit from the mandatory indefinite detention of asylum seekers.[4]
2009 speakers
- Keysar Trad[5] (Muslim advocate)
- George Pell[5] (Australian Roman Catholic Cardinal)
- Christopher Hitchens[5] (Atheism advocate)
- Germaine Greer (Feminist)[5]
- Susan Greenfield (Neuroscientist)
- Dambisa Moyo (African-futurist economist)[5] The New York Times dubbed "Anti-Bono"
- Greg Barns[5] (Columnist)
- Oliver Marc Hartwich[5] (Economist)
- Norm Stamper[5] former Chief of the Seattle Police Department
- Cassandra Wilkinson (President of FBi Radio)[5]
- John Humphreys (libertarian economist)
- Chris Barrie (Retired admiral)[6][7]
2010 speakers
- Alan Dershowitz
- Geoffrey Robertson
- Waleed Aly
- Annabel Crabb
- Elizabeth Farrelly
- Miriam Lyons
- Marcus Westbury
- John Quiggin
- P.W. Singer
- Andrew Leigh
- Tariq Ali
- Ross Gittins
- Paul McGeough
- David Hetherington
- Luke Malpass
- Tom Switzer
- Steve Biddulph
- Cordelia Fine
- Clive Hamilton
- Eric Kaufmann
- Rebecca Huntley
- David Marr
- Chris Taylor
- Marcus Westbury
- Lenore Skenazy
- Hugh Mackay
- John Keane
- Anne Manne
- Fred Chaney
- Julian Morrow
2011 speakers
- Julian Assange
- Alexander McCall Smith
- Jonathan Safran Foer
- Jon Ronson
- Mike Daisey
- Marc Thiessen
- Emmanuel Jal
- Kate Adie
- Christopher Ryan
- Andrew Leigh
- Slavoj Žižek
- Salil Shetty
- Mona Eltahawy
- Lisa Pryor
- Samah Hadid
- Catherine Lumby
- Roy Masters
- Michael Kirby
- Alison Broinwski
- Rebecca Huntley
- Richard Denniss
- David Marr
- Alan Noble
- Martin Rogers
- Alec Cameron
- Jim Wallace
- Cheryl Kernot
- Philip Nitschke
- Dick Smith
- Julian Burnside
- Simon Sheikh
- Bronwyn Fredericks
- Aileen Moreton-Robinson
- Stephanie Alexander
- Gabrielle Hamilton
- Appelspiel
2012 speakers
- Sam Harris[8]
- Illan Pappe
- Germaine Greer
- Tim Harford
- Jason Silva
- Joe Hildebrand
- Gideon Haigh
- Jesse Bering
- Bishop Julian Porteous
- Jane Bussmann
- Eliza Griswold
- Ed Howker
- Shiv Malik
- Alberto Giubilini
- Francesca Minerva
- Peter Fitzsimons
- Simon Laham
- Corman Cullinan
- Guy Pearse
- Appelspiel
- Brian Morris
- Alec Doomadgee
- Samah Hadid
- Ronnie Chan
- Li Cunxin
- Geoffrey Garrett
- Jianying Zha
- Stan Grant
- Pasi Sahlberg
- Eva Cox
- Tara Moss
- Richard Heinberg
- Michael Anderson
- Chris Leithner
2013 speakers
- David Simon[9]
- Hanna Rosin
- Evgeny Morozov
- Vandana Shiva
- Lawrence Krauss
- Peter Rollins
- Peter Hitchens
- Arlie Hochschild
- Dan Savage
- Kirby Ferguson
- John Safran
- Erwin James
- Peter Moskos
- Mustafa Bargouthi
- Conrad Black
- Malcolm Knox
- Christos Tsiolkas
- Patricia Edgar
- Dennis Altman
- James Fallows
- Joe Hildebrand
- James O'Loghlin
- Julian Burnside
- Chris Berg
- Emily Maguire
- Simran Sethi
2014 speakers
- Masha Alekhina
- Liz Ann MacGregor
- Bettina Arndt
- David Baker
- Peter Berner
- Lydia Cacho
- Mark Carnegie
- Jane Caro
- Bob Carr
- Simon Crerar
- Kirsten Drysdale
- Tim Duggan
- Kajsa Ekis Ekman
- Whitney Fitzsimmons
- Kitty Flanagan
- Tim Flannery
- Malcolm Fraser
- Peter Fray
- Bradley Garrett
- Masha Gessen
- Peter Hartcher
- John Hewson
- Lewis Hobba
- Kay Hymowitz
- Dan Ilic
- Nöelle Janaczewska
- Elizabeth Kolbert
- Mark Latham
- Anne Manne
- Francesca Minerva
- Natasha Mitchell
- Rebecca Newberger Goldstein
- Emily Nussbaum
- Alissa Nutting
- Dave O'Neil
- Gordon Parker
- John Pilger
- Steven Pinker[10]
- Elizabeth Pisani
- Huw Price
- Glenn Robbins
- Chip Rolley
- Sir Salman Rushdie
- Mark Scott
- Judith Sloan
- Tom Switzer
- Jaan Tallinn
- Nadya Tolokonnikov
- Stella Young
- Ragip Zarakolu
2015 speakers
- Tariq Ali
- Professor Frank Brennan
- Anna Broinowski
- James Colley
- Peter C. Doherty
- Clementine Ford
- Martin Ford
- Damon Gameau
- Dennis Glover
- AC Grayling
- Peter Greste
- Johann Hari
- Dan Ilic
- James Jericho
- Dr Helen Joyce
- Suki Kim
- Michael Kirby
- Naomi Klein
- Paul Krugman
- Marc Lewis
- Miriam Lyons
- Jane Martin
- Chris Munro
- Malarndirri McCarthy
- Kate McCartney
- Laurie Penny
- Gideon Raff
- Helen Razer
- Jon Ronson
- John Safran
- Eric Schlosser
- Jordan Shanks
- Rebecca Shaw
- Sarai Walker
- Michael Wesley
- Sarah Wilson
- Murong Xuecun
- The Moth
2016 speakers
- John Bell (Australian actor)
- Jesse Bering
- Andrew Bolt
- Raewyn Connell
- Molly Crabapple
- Annabel Crabb
- Stephen Dank
- Satyajit Das
- Pat Dudgeon
- Tobias Feakin
- Cordelia Fine
- Tim Flannery
- Lisa Forrest
- Alicia Garza (Black Lives Matter)
- Bates Gill
- Priyamvada Gopal
- Kevan Gosper
- Stan Grant (journalist)
- A.C. Grayling
- Germaine Greer
- Lev Grossman
- Tracey Holmes
- Sarah Houbolt
- Shanto Iyengar
- Simon Jackman
- Alok Jha
- Miranda Johnson
- Michael Kirby (judge)
- Brian Lipson
- Sheryn Lee
- Philippe Legrain
- Ming Long
- Hamish Macdonald
- Dee Madigan
- David Marr
- Jason Mazanov
- Jane McAdam
- Lloyd Newson
- Norman Ornstein
- George Packer
- Jennifer Rayner
- John Elder Robison
- Henry Rollins
- Alexei Sayle
- Laura Secor
- Lionel Shriver
- Tim Soutphommasane
- Neil Strauss
- Lee Vinsel
- Sheila Watt-Cloutier
- Daniel Webb
- Jennifer Whelan
2018 speakers
- Adam Ni
- Angela Nagle
- Ayelet Waldman
- Chuck Klosterman
- Donna Green
- Germaine Greer
- Darren Goodsir
- Haris Aziz
- Jeremy Moss
- Judith Sloan
- Khandis Blake
- Linda Jakobson
- Matt Beard
- Megan Phelps-Roper
- Mick Dodson
- Niall Ferguson
- Nikki Goldstein
- Pankaj Mishra
- Rebecca Huntley
- Richard Holden
- Riley Harmon
- Rob Brooks
- Rosalind Dixon
- Seth Stephens-Davidowitz
- Stephen Fry
- Susan Dodds
- Toby Walsh
- Xanthe Mallett
- Tim Soutphommasane
- Zeynep Tufekci
- Zhao Hai
2020 Festival
Australia's original provocative ideas festival was set to return in 2020 for its 10th festival. 3 to 5 April was to be a milestone weekend at Sydney Town Hall, themed around 'dangerous realities'.
The 2020 Program included: Unforgivable – Spinifex Gum, Seethal Bency, Dujuan Hoosan, Daisy Jeffrey, Audrey Mason-Hyde, Dylan Storer Wrongful Justice – Lindy Chamberlain-Creighton, Hamish Macdonald The Uninhabitable Earth – David Wallace-Wells The Butterfly Effect – Jon Ronson The Tyranny of Merit – Michael Sandel, Ann Mossop Surveillance States – Edward Snowden, Simon Longstaff The Hitch – Roxane Gay, Ann Mossop The World We Choose – Peter Singer, Jane McAdam, David Wallace-Wells, Angie Abdilla, Simon Longstaff The Truth About China – Kevin Rudd, Yaqiu Wang, Vicky Xiuzhong, Jason Yat-Sen Li, Peter Hartcher Manufacturing Inequality – Pasi Sahlberg, Ann Mossop Political Correct-Mess – Van Badham, Kevin Donnelly, Osman Faruqi, Chris Kenny, Sarah Dingle The Future Is History – Masha Gessen, Matt Bevan Tech: Capitalism’s New Clothes – Evgeny Morozov, Toby Walsh You Can’t Handle The Truth – Megan Davis, Ann Mossop Editing Humans – Sam Sternberg, Simon Longstaff Climate Change Is A Crime – Kajsa Ekis Ekman, Matt Bevan Ageing Is A Disease – David Sinclair, Norman Swan Dangerous Futures – Emma Jane, James Halstead, Lucas Lixinski, Michael Richardson, Katherine Kemp Hosting Humanity – Evgency Morozov, Mark Pesce, Matt Beard Buying Babies – Kajsa Ekis Ekman, Sarah Dingle, Andrew West Nuclear Deterrence Works – Stephan Frühling, Simon Longstaff The Consciousness Lie – Joel Pearson, Rob Brooks Ethics of the Apocalypse – Carl Smith, Matt Beard Give It Away Now – Matt Beard PIG – Kaleider My Greatest Period Ever – Lucy Peach
On 16 March, the 2020 Festival of Dangerous Ideas was officially cancelled due to the Coronavirus pandemic as the NSW Minister of Health issued a ban of non-essential public gatherings of over 500 people.[11]
In May 2020, FODI launched FODI Digital. Speakers included Kevin Rudd, Daisy Jeffrey, David Sinclair, Eleanor Gordon-Smith, Stan Grant, and Tim Soutphommasane. A second series of FODI Digital conversations were launched in September 2020 featuring Edward Snowden, Marcia Langton, and David Wallace-Wells.
References
- "Festival of Dangerous Ideas History".
- "Festival Of Dangerous Ideas". News.com.au. 28 September 2009.
- "NEW VENUE. NEW DATE. NEW DANGER". www.festivalofdangerousideas.com.
- "A request to Nadya and Masha #FODI [English version] [Russian version – click here]". 11 August 2014.
- "Verbal grenades at speakers' corner". The Sydney Morning Herald. Linda Morris. 23 September 2009.
- "You want dangerous ideas? These are dangerous ideas". The Crikey. Guy Rundle. Tuesday, 6 October 2009.
- "We need to debate conscription". WAtoday. Chris Barrie. 4 October 2009
- "Festival of Dangerous Ideas". Archived from the original on 24 June 2016. Retrieved 27 October 2012.
- Simon, David (7 December 2012). "There are now two Americas. My country is a horror show". The Guardian The Observer. Sydney,Australia. Retrieved 11 December 2012..
- Pinker addressed FODI on the topic "A History of Violence" in which "using a ruthless examination of the data" he showed that "violence is declining and has been for centuries". Video of Pinker's presentation
- Longstaff, Simon (16 March 2020). "The Festival of Dangerous Ideas has been cancelled". ethics.org.au. Retrieved 18 March 2020.
External links
- SOH 2011 Festival of Dangerous Ideas Sydney Morning Herald 27 September 2011