Archive for April, 2009

KITSCHEN WORKSHOPS 2009

Tuesday, April 21st, 2009 | Fiction, Media, Poetry, Workshops | No Comments

kitschen_exterior1Taking place in Dormouse and the Teapot, Kitschen, W2/218, Woodend Mill 2, Mossley, Lancashire. This new workshop venue has beautiful views over the Tame River and the Huddersfield canal with good rail links to Manchester and Huddersfield. There is ample parking.

The Kitschen Workshops 2009 (June – August) will be led by Helen Farrall, Gaia Holmes, Zoe Lambert, Andrew Oldham and Ian Parks. The workshops will include the sensory detail in poetry, re-writing, character based scene writing, narrative poetry, workshop for ongoing work, creating fictional characters and short stories. All workshops take place on a Saturday morning (10:00AM-1:00PM) and will include tea and refreshments.

The workshops take a maximum of 12 students in each and cost £30 each. You can read the online programme here and book.

JG Ballard 1930-2009

Tuesday, April 21st, 2009 | Media | No Comments

ballardMy first connection with the work of Ballard was via Blue Peter. Seems odd that one of the greatest novelists and philopsophers of the twentieth century should end up on a children’s programme in the 80s. The fluff piece didn’t talk about Ballard’s dystopian views or anger at growing consumerism. The bitter irony was that it was selling a lifestyle. A boy had been ‘plucked our of obscurity’ (yes, children’s programmes once delved beyond the monosyllabic) to play the lead role in the adaptation of Ballard’s ‘Empire of the Sun’.

It was a very young Christian Bale and when I saw the film I was mesmerised by the powerful imagery, performance and themes that ran throughout. This was a character that was thrown into a horrific world. A character robbed of their childhood, banished from being an adult by people who thought they knew better, and was used, manipulated and abandoned by every adult around them. What big ideas, what a big film! An underrated piece of cinema.

As in many cases, the film led me to the book and the book was even more powerful, detailing JG Ballard’s childhood in China, the invading Japanese army and the POW camps, the death marches and the coming of the atomic age. There is no doubt that Ballard owed his ability to tackle dystopia to this point in his life. What is surprising is that he wrote at all after such a terrible point in our history.

I will miss Ballard’s writing. I am such a Ballard fan that I have a first edition of Interzone which includes an insert with a Ballard story. This is rare! Very rare! And very good. Ballard led me to other writers, Olaf Stapledon, M.P. Shiel, Christopher Priest and John Christopher. Yet, it is such books as ‘Empire of the Sun’ and ‘The Drowned World’ that will always stick with me. Regardless of the genre Ballard wrote in, he constantly looked at the folly of man, in their growing consumerism and disengagement from everything around them. He dealt with these themes on a level we could all access, he placed his characters in our shopping malls, our motorways, our cities, towns and homes. I will miss not being able to read any new work from him.

You can read the obituary here.

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Kitschen Writers Workshops, Mossley, Lancashire

Wednesday, April 8th, 2009 | Fiction, Poetry, Uncategorized, Workshops | No Comments

kitschenTaking place in a new venue (see image) in a waterside mill on the Tame River, situated near the Huddersfield canal and with good rail links to Manchester, Huddersfield and Leeds. These series of workshops will have guest writers including Zoe Lambert (published by Comma Press), Gaia Holmes (Comma Press), Ian Parks (Waywiser Press) and Andrew Oldham (Route Books). The workshops will include poetry, fiction, script and non-fiction over the 12 weeks of summer from June-September. Workshops will take place on a Saturday morning (10:00AM-1:00PM) and will include tea and refreshments.

In the workshops, award-winning poets and writers will help new and growing writers with their work. The workshops take a maximum of 12 students in each workshop and cost £30 each. The programme will be announced late April 2009. Individuals interested in hearing more can contact them at: events@incwriters.co.uk or incwriters@yahoo.co.uk

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Incorporating Writing Issue 6 Vol 2: VIOLENCE feat. Andrew Oldham

Friday, April 3rd, 2009 | Magazines | No Comments
incorporatingwriting62www.incorporatingwriting.co.uk
Issue 6 Vol 2: VIOLENCE

So, the credit crunch has hit and violent crime is on the rise. Here in the offices of Incorporating Writing we have seen the way violence escalates in the everyday. Last week one of the reviewers borrowed an editor’s pen and never returned it. They have not been seen since and the blood smear echoes of their fingerprints on the office floor is not being talked about. Violence is something we are all drawn to, it is the headline news, the tickertape on twitter and the moral question of the moment. Yet, the macabre is growing in the world of writing and the arts. In the latest edition, Andrew Taylor and Daniele Pantano reveal their growing addiction to the darker side of writing and living. In our articles, new boy, Ian Kenworthy, takes his own life in his hands as he clearly states the North is a place of violence and death. Helen Stacey stands her ground against the growing tide of anger and Valeria Kogan notes violence and paranoia is growing excuse in our world. In her column from America, Christine Brandel notes that the USA is now safer than the UK. In his editorial, Andrew Oldham comes if with a one handed solution to acts of violence, compulsory masturbation. Between all this and much more, Sara-Jayne Parsons walks into the fray as the new Arts Editor, revamping Perfect Eye into Writing with Light. Parsons brings us the work of John Darwell and startling images of the foot and mouth outbreak that swamped the UK earlier in the decade. Janet Aspey oversees reviews on the violent offerings from Roberto Saviano (now in hiding after being placed on the Mafia’s hitlist), Sudhir Venkatesh, Jason Donald, Vesna Maric and Gil Adamson. The walls of Incorporating Writing may be blood stained but we still remain bloody critical and free at www.incorporatingwriting.co.uk
 
Incorporating Writing has now set up a brand new Facebook group at: http://www.new.facebook.com/group.php?gid=5542923935&ref=ts. You can join for free and have another way of keeping in touch, or subscribe today through the site and get free news from Incwriters.
 
You can now follow us on Twitter: http://twitter.com/Incorp_Editors
 
CALL TO WRITING COURSES: Incorporating Writing is looking for content for it’s Autumn/Winter issue. This is a way for academics and undergraduates/postgraduates to work side by side on content. Contributing institutions from across the globe will receive a free advert in two editions of the magazine (2009-2010) and will potentially reach over 30,000 readers. Deadline for emails of interest is 1st July 2009. Email editor@incorporatingwriting.co.uk
Incorporating Writing (ISSN 1743-0380) is an imprint of Incwriters, back issues are archived at www.incwriters.co.uk/magaz ines.htm
 

Help spread the word and forward this news to everyone you know. The next issue is AGE (deadline for content 1st June 2009).

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