A portrait of Virginia Woolf by Roger Fry, circa 1917. In Michelle de Kretser’s ‘Theory & Practice’, the protagonist is disillusioned by the gap between Virginia Woolf’s “theorising of women’s lives in ground-breaking books” and her racist depiction of E W Perera, a leader of the independence movement in colonial Ceylon, in her diaries. Wikimedia Commons
Podcast

Michelle de Kretser on her new novel, ‘Theory & Practice’: Southasia Review of Books podcast #23

A conversation with the Sri Lankan-born Australian author on unsettling the realist novel form and exploring the gaps between ideals and actions

Welcome to the Southasia Review of Books Podcast, where we speak to celebrated authors and emerging literary voices from across Southasia. In this episode, Shwetha Srikanthan speaks to the two-time Miles Franklin award winner Michelle de Kretser about her new novel, Theory & Practice (Catapult, February 2025).

How do we reconcile our ideals with the way we live our lives in practice? And what happens when you revere the art but loathe its artist?

A young woman, Cindy, arrives in Melbourne to research the novels of Virginia Woolf. It is 1986 and theory – with a capital T – dominates universities. She looks back on growing up in Sri Lanka before her family migrated to Sydney. She meets artists, activists, students and Kit, who claims to be in another ‘deconstructed’ relationship, yet they become lovers. Meanwhile, she is disoriented when she discovers the problematic ways in which Virginia Woolf, her literary hero, portrayed Southasians in her diaries. 

Theory & Practice is an account of truth and shame, taking up this exploration through the intersections between private and public, personal and political. In pushing the boundaries of what a novel can be, and also asking questions of the act of reading itself, Michelle de Kretser shows without telling the messy gap and the breakdowns between theory and practice.

This episode is now available on Youtube, Spotify and Apple Podcasts

Episode notes: 

Theory & Practice by Michelle de Kretser (Catapult, February 2025)

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‘Loving Friend’ (2009) by Kerry Negara

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Despite Wickremesinghe’s arrest, Sri Lanka’s politics is stuck in its old loop

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