Author Archives: godboss

New Writing Viewpoints

To celebrate the forthcoming publication of Towards a Poetics of Creative Writing by Dominique Hecq, Multilingual Matters are offering all the books from their ‘New Writing Viewpoint’ series at 60% discount until this Sunday, November 30, 2014. Just use the code CREATIVE60 at the checkout when buying the books from their website (http://www.multilingual-matters.com/).

The titles included in this offer are: Does the Writing Workshop Still Work? edited by Dianne Donnelly, Establishing Creative Writing Studies as an Academic Discipline by Dianne Donnelly, Key Issues in Creative Writing edited by Dianne Donnelly and Graeme Harper, On Creative Writing by Graeme Harper, Creative Writing Studies edited by Graeme Harper and Jeri Kroll, The Creativity Market edited by Dominique Hecq, Towards a Poetics of Creative Writing by Dominique Hecq,Teaching Poetry Writing by Tom Hunley, Power and Identity in the Creative Writing Classroom edited by Anna Leahy, Negotiating the Personal in Creative Writing by Carl Vandermeulen. Please feel free to pass this on to your colleagues. Please email info@multilingual-matters.com for further information or if you have any problems.

 

University Writing Programs Deliver!

‘University writing programs deliver’: that’s the message now taken up by ‘The Conversation’, the independent media site publishing commentary, research and analysis from Australian universities and the CSIRO. The lead article, entitled ‘University writing programs deliver, so let’s turn the page’ was authored by AAWP members Dallas Baker, Donna Lee Brien, Jen Webb and Lynda Hawryluk, and appeared on November 7th. It provides a fresh and reasoned view of the value of writing programs, supported by evidence, and puts to rest a number of myths and claims based on opinion. Visit http://theconversation.com/university-writing-programs-deliver-so-lets-turn-the-page-33721 to read the piece in full.

‘Chapter One’ – A New Pathway To Publication

The AAWP is launching an exciting new publication pathway and prize for emerging writers: ‘Chapter One’. The winner of this manuscript competition will receive a written appraisal of his or her work from an established literary author and a letter of recommendation to University of Western Australia Press (UWAP) – a ‘tick of approval’ that will effectively place their manuscript on top of the submissions pile for priority assessment. The winner will also receive a $500 cash prize and fully subsidised conference fees for the annual conference of the AAWP in November, 2015, to read from their work. ‘Chapter One’ will open on 30 November 2014 and close on 30 June 2015.

Eligible writers are invited to submit one chapter (or 5,000 words) of prose from a literary novel, short story collection, or a hybrid work that crosses genre boundaries. Alternatively, they may submit up to 500 lines of poetry. If the full manuscript is as robust as ‘Chapter One’ the winner may secure a publishing contract with UWAP (http://uwap.uwa.edu.au). Click here to download full details of ‘Chapter One’ entry. Enquiries and submissions to submissions@aawp.org.au

 

 

CFP For Special Issue Of TEXT – Beyond Australia Queer

The 1990s saw the rise of queer theory and politics and this special issue of TEXT Journal reflects and builds on Australia Queer, a pioneering collection of queer writing. This special issue seeks submissions—fiction, scholarly non-fiction, plays and essays—that address the question of what ‘Australia queer’ might mean in the current historical moment. Is ‘queer’ still viable, twenty years after its inception, or has it been superseded? What does it mean, in the early twenty-first century, to be ‘Australian’ and ‘queer’? The deadline for initial submission is 1 March 2015. Download full details.

Annamarie Jagose has described queer ‘as an umbrella term for a coalition of culturally marginal sexual self-identifications and … a nascent theoretical model which has developed out of more traditional lesbian and gay studies’ (1996: 1). In Australia, the arrival of queer was heralded by the work of writers such as Christos Tsiolkas, Dean Kiley and Fiona McGregor; the activism of groups such as the Australian chapter of ActUp; and scholarly work which includes journals such as Critical InQueeries (1995-98) and a 1996 Special Edition of Meanjin, entitled ‘Australia Queer’. Scholarly papers should be no more than six thousand words in length. Creative works will usually be 3,500–5,000 words in length, or poetry or short fiction up to 3,000 words in length, or as agreed by editors. Dowload the CFP for full details or email Dallas.Baker@scu.edu.au or Jay.Thompson@latrobe.edu.au

 

Social Alternatives: Call For Stories

Social Alternatives is an independent, not-for-profit quarterly refereed journal. It is committed to the principles of social justice, commenting on important social issues of current concern or public debate. We publish practical and theoretical articles on relevant topics, as well as reviews, short stories, poems, graphics, comment, and critique. Contributions of stories up to 2,500 are invited, particularly on the theme of ‘peace’, by 15 November 2014. Email gbrock@usc.edu.au or download the submission requirements.

‘Minding The Gap’ – Registration Now Open

Registration for ‘Minding the Gap: writing across thresholds and faultlines’, the 19th Annual Conference of the AAWP, is now open. The online registration form, as well as venue, transport and accommodation information, can be found by going to the page under the Annual Conference tab (above) or clicking here.

The Art Of Leadership Through Poetry

Submissions are invited to The Art of Leadership Through Poetry: Deakin Leadership Centre’s International Poetry Competition. Poems, up to 100 lines, must be on the theme of ‘leadership’ but this is very broadly conceived: entries may reflect on leaders (alive, dead or fictitious), ideas or processes of leadership or even if such a thing exists at all. The winner will receive $1,000, 2nd prize $500 and 3rd $250. There are commendations and an originality prize, and all winning poems will be published in an electronic book in both written and spoken forms. Entry is free and submissions should be sent to poems@deakin.edu.au by 30 October, 2014. For full details, visitwww.leadershippoems.info or click here.

Seriously Funny: Humour In Journalism

Humour has been a vital ingredient of the print media since it emerged in the 17th century, yet it has hardly featured in academic studies of media history. Contributions are called for a new text that is aiming to fill that gap with a collection of papers by international scholars. It will draw from a range of disciplines such as media history, international literary journalism, English/American studies, humour studies, media content analysis, cultural studies.

Abstracts of 200 words are invited by 2 September 2014. Please send to the editors, Richard Lance Keeble rkeeble@lincoln.ac.uk and David Swick david.swick@ukings.ca Final chapters of up to 7,000 words will be due by 2 January 2015. The publishers, Routledge, of Abingdon, Oxon, UK, are being approached, with publication planned for late 2015. To download the CFP, click here.