Joe Kahn writes the trailer for the next big LEGO Star Wars game: LEGO Star Wars: Episodes 1-6 and Filler, in this weeks Post-Digital Content roundup...
Read MoreHailey O’Gorman talks to Belfast based writer, performer and editor Ash Anraí-Jones about aer debut podcast, Save Our Games
Read MoreImmy Moore writes a post-digital press release for the Digi-Journal, following on from Monday’s Diji-Journal poster…
Read MoreTheo Veall proposes a new concept for writers in the post-digital age…
Read MoreIn this week’s Post-Digital Content student roundup, Joe Khan interviews Julian Killian Roddering about the wonders of the ‘Partum Pill’
Read MoreThe third entry in Rupture, a series about queerness, the body and everything that waits in the middle.
Read MoreMA Professional Writing student Emily Gough writes a brief defence of fanfiction, its uses, and its existence in our literary canon.
Read MoreIn another poetry instalment, second year student Jess Buxton writes about an encroaching monotony in ‘Empty Kitchen’ and a bunch of flowers, wilting in a vase, that sat on her kitchen table during lockdown. Jess likens these images to mental health, exploring the idea that we often only realise in hindsight that we have not been kind to ourselves.
Read MoreIn this instalment of the market report series, Emily Gough explores Instapoetry as a more accessible form of poetry, its reception, and its impact in the publishing market.
Read MoreSecond year English with Creative Writing student Jess Buxton pens two poems inspired by a colour page and a closed restaurant, but which invoke images of storms, oceans, oil, texture, and electrifying colour.
Read MoreIn her market report, third year Eleanor Rogers writes about the evolution of dating simulation games.
Read MoreIn the second instalment of a two-part poetry series, Olivia Caldwell pens two poems packed full of anatomical imagery.
Read MoreIn this instalment of the market report series, Aimee Shaw explores queer characters and representations in young adult literature and the publishing industry.
Read More‘Consider Me’ is a poem full of contrasts by second year creative writing student Olivia Caldwell, and is the first of a two-part poetry series.
Read MoreIn the first instalment of the market report series, Georgia Pine explores the presence LGBTQ+ themes and characters in children’s books.
Read More2nd year Creative Writing student Amy Barrett writes about life and love in two poems, exploring turbulent childhoods and the image of a florist, selling dying flowers to blooming lovers, each with its own surface of positivity that can be unpicked and unravelled.
Read MoreMA Professional Writing student Caitlin Lydon has a short story published in the online literary publication Passengers Journal.
Read More‘Ashes Ashes’ is a poem celebrating a huge coppiced ash tree known amongst the Tregoniggie Woodland community as the ‘Tregoniggie Titan’. Ash trees in the UK are under threat from disease, ash dieback, which threatens to wipe out the entire ash population, and third year student Nicky Peters writes with this in mind, creating a poem that is an homage and a possible farewell to a fascinating member of the woodland community.
Read MoreInspired by a residency at the Roger and Laura Farnworth Arts Residency in Bodmin, Nicky Peter’s poems ‘Fungus Symbiosis’ and ‘Other Apples in the Orchard 2’ are an inquiry into the disgusting, surreal, and warped version of tree life that is often ignored in favour of more romantic readings of the natural world. The poems explore the symbiotic relationship between tree root and fungus, and the moments of decay that aesthetic images of apple orchards omit.
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