Special Issue: Ideas and realities: Creative writing in Asia todayThe essay charts the history and goals of Asia Pacific Writers & Translators since its beginnings in 2005, noting how the association has evolved to incorporate creative writing pedagogy and, importantly, literary translation. It draws on linguist MAK Halliday’s discussion of the ‘characterology’ of Mandarin Chinese to ask whether a literary community such as APWT might also have a ‘certain cut’ identifiable in the features and effects of the new writing that emerges from the interactions of participating practitioners as they cross boundaries and challenge limits. The essay argues that the mission of APWT is transformative and ongoing and needs greater advocacy. Examples cit...
Review of Contemporary Asian Australian Poets edited by Adam Aitken, Kim Cheng Boey & Michelle Cahil...
Vol. 2 no. 1 also called issue 3 entitled: Embodied KnowledgesWriters realise their creative practic...
When postcolonial studies made its debut in Western academes, it was, to use Stuart Hall’s words, ‘t...
The essay charts the history and goals of Asia Pacific Writers & Translators since its beginnings in...
This paper, part of a series of ‘provocations’ delivered at a symposium in Hong Kong, covers some of...
In this paper, I describe the background, rationale and activities of the Asia-Pacific Writing Partn...
At first glance, the contents of this issue of the journal may appear eclectic, if not scattered. It...
This special issue of the Journal of Postcolonial Writing, the result of a collaboration with the So...
In the introductory essay to this collection, Wenche Ommundsen offers an account of the recent emerg...
This special issue of the Journal of Postcolonial Writing, the result of a collaboration with the So...
Australian literature has over the last 50 years witnessed the gradual inclusion of writers and text...
In recent years, creative writing has spread far beyond its origins in the Anglophone higher educati...
is article explores the prospects for internationalizing the Master of Fine Arts (MFA) in Creative W...
When did ‘Asian Australian writing’ come into existence? Answering this question is almost as diffic...
This article considers the status of the writer at a time when publication is no longer elusive, giv...
Review of Contemporary Asian Australian Poets edited by Adam Aitken, Kim Cheng Boey & Michelle Cahil...
Vol. 2 no. 1 also called issue 3 entitled: Embodied KnowledgesWriters realise their creative practic...
When postcolonial studies made its debut in Western academes, it was, to use Stuart Hall’s words, ‘t...
The essay charts the history and goals of Asia Pacific Writers & Translators since its beginnings in...
This paper, part of a series of ‘provocations’ delivered at a symposium in Hong Kong, covers some of...
In this paper, I describe the background, rationale and activities of the Asia-Pacific Writing Partn...
At first glance, the contents of this issue of the journal may appear eclectic, if not scattered. It...
This special issue of the Journal of Postcolonial Writing, the result of a collaboration with the So...
In the introductory essay to this collection, Wenche Ommundsen offers an account of the recent emerg...
This special issue of the Journal of Postcolonial Writing, the result of a collaboration with the So...
Australian literature has over the last 50 years witnessed the gradual inclusion of writers and text...
In recent years, creative writing has spread far beyond its origins in the Anglophone higher educati...
is article explores the prospects for internationalizing the Master of Fine Arts (MFA) in Creative W...
When did ‘Asian Australian writing’ come into existence? Answering this question is almost as diffic...
This article considers the status of the writer at a time when publication is no longer elusive, giv...
Review of Contemporary Asian Australian Poets edited by Adam Aitken, Kim Cheng Boey & Michelle Cahil...
Vol. 2 no. 1 also called issue 3 entitled: Embodied KnowledgesWriters realise their creative practic...
When postcolonial studies made its debut in Western academes, it was, to use Stuart Hall’s words, ‘t...