Barry Hill (born 1943) is an Australian historian, writer, and academic.
He has written poetry, fiction, non-fiction, and libretti. He is known for his biography of anthropologist Ted Strehlow, called Broken Song: T G H Strehlow and Aboriginal Possession, published in 2002.
Hill was born in Melbourne.
He studied at the University of Melbourne, gaining his Bachelor of Arts (BA), Bachelor of Education (BEd) and a Doctor of Philosophy (PhD) and from there went to London, where he gained his Master of Arts (MA) degree from the University of London.
Hill has worked in both Melbourne and London. In London he worked for the Times Literary Supplement.
In 1975 Hill became a full-time writer. Between 1998 and 2008 he was poetry editor of The Australian newspaper.
Hill was part of the cast in the first public performance of Kenneth G. Ross's important Australian play Breaker Morant: A Play in Two Acts, presented by the Melbourne Theatre Company at the Melbourne Athenaeum on 2 February 1978.
Hill has produced performance works for radio, including Desert Canticles, that premiered on ABC Radio on 5 February 2001. Hill is quoted as saying the piece was inspired by the following: <blockquote>"Desert Canticles arises out of a marriage, a decade of travelling, and some years writing the literary biography of T.G.H. Strehlow out of Central Australia. I was writing my own poems out of love and the landscape, while trying to fathom Strehlow's great achievement in Songs of Central Australia. So the notion of translation as a metaphor for relationship â with place, with others, and with songs of different cultures (Hebraic, Buddhist, and Aboriginal) became a natural one upon which to thread a radio work."</blockquote>
Hill is married to Rose Bygrave, a member of the band Goanna, and lives in Queenscliffe, Victoria.