

Writing on the body: desecration or worship?
Sep 19, 2025
54:06
The art of marking the body, by piercing the flesh and pushing ink into the wound, the tattoo, has had an uneasy relationship with religion.
It's sometimes seen as a desecration of the body, but equally, the tattoo is venerated as a rite of passage and as a form of worship.
Then there are tattoos in the secular context. They are so common in Australia now, it’s actually hard to find a body under the age of 40 NOT permanently marked by ink.
It’s a fascinating form of human expression, both in existence for millennia, and changing before our eyes.
GUESTS:
- LARS KRUTAK is an anthropologist and documentary maker who specialises in tattoos and their cultural significance. . His new book Indigenous Tattoo Traditions (Princeton University Press) explores the role of tattooing cross-culturally.
- JULIA MAGEAU GRAY is a researcher, documentary maker, and tattoo artist. Julia is credited with revitalising women's tattoo traditions across Melanesia