Brown Snake Night ... Sing Me Too single work   poetry   "It was Brown Snake night,"
Issue Details: First known date: 2021... 2021 Brown Snake Night ... Sing Me Too
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Publication Details of Only Known VersionEarliest 2 Known Versions of

  • Appears in:
    y separately published work icon Axon : Creative Explorations On the Mend vol. 11 no. 2 December 2021 23642937 2021 periodical issue

    'There has been a growing creative interest and scholarly engagement with practices and frameworks of care and repair and their real and implied relationship to breakage and acts of restoration. While not specifically directed at the year that was 2020, there are many ways in which the worlds in which we now live might be in need of mending. And how might we envisage recovery? This issue takes a broad interpretation of the theme and submissions explore, challenge and respond in a multitude of ways.' (Publication summary)

    2021
    pg. 30
  • Appears in:
    y separately published work icon Rabbit Art no. 36 2022 25563149 2022 periodical issue 2022 pg. 104-105
  • Appears in:
    y separately published work icon TEXT Special Issue Writing Dreams : Reconceptualising the Literary Dream in Storytelling no. 68 2022 25657992 2022 periodical issue 'This Special Issue of TEXT explores the capacity of dreamscapes to function as powerful literary devices within an array of creative writing forms, while also informing and shaping creative arts practice more broadly. Its authors demonstrate diverse curiosities about creative practice as a kind of dreaming, where a practitioner’s engagements might constitute a quasi dreamwork-on-the-page. In addition to this, creative thinking itself can pass via registers reminiscent of the dream and of its atmospheres and formation, broaching unconscious material, experiences, and paradigms. Suffice to say, an inherent connection between dreams, storytelling and the production of artwork more generally is tested and expanded upon in these articles. The unconscious processes that unfold during dreaming may harvest their contents and compositions from the conscious processes engaged and activated intentionally by established practitioners when working in literary, narrative and poetic forms, but also vice versa. The poietic strategies fundamental to crafting dream sequences for written forms entail far more than a simple duplication of any real dreams’ narrative potential, associative chains, structures, or uncanny atmospheres: they require writers to translate dream-like elements into tangible sequences, rhythms, or scenes, to bring material substance to the oneiric.' 

    (Publication abstract)

    2022
Last amended 5 Jan 2022 08:04:01
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