Issue Details: First known date: 2025... 2025 Fringe Dwelling in Autobiographical Memory – Writers’ Perspectives
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AbstractHistoryArchive Description

'This essay includes collated contributions from practising writers, participants in a Creative Writing|Neuroimaging Exploratory Study, Ideasthetic Imagining – Mapping the Brain’s Microstates Using Magnetoencephalography (MEG), conducted at Swinburne University (2023, Melbourne, Australia). The study investigates neural activity in participants’ brains while undertaking a creative writing workshop. Participants write imaginatively from short and long-term memory. The research team utilises MEG neuroimaging technology to determine where and how the brain is processing information at distinct stages of the workshop. The creative writing workshop at the heart of the study involves imaginative approaches to life writing, transforming unresolved memories through creative practice. As participants engage in the workshop, the research team measures activity in target regions of the brain. The researchers then analyse the interaction between distinct regions of the brain at various stages. The following essay gathers the voices of the experimental group (practising writers), asking them to reflect upon their experience of writing a long-term memory, as they experienced it at the time and, subsequently, from a perspective other than their own. In this exercise, particular regions of the brain are activated (to a far greater extent) in the experimental group (practising writers) as opposed to the control group (non- writers).' (Publication abstract)

Publication Details of Only Known VersionEarliest 2 Known Versions of

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    y separately published work icon TEXT : The Journal of the Australian Association of Writing Programs Writing from the Fringes no. 29 February 2025 29701818 2025 periodical issue 'This special issue of TEXT is primarily an outcome of the 2023 AAWP conference held at the University of Canberra. The theme of that conference, “We Need to Talk”, facilitated part of a wider conversation, locally and globally, about the role played by creative thinking and practice/s in navigating some of the wicked contemporary global problems with which we presently grapple. The challenges associated with navigating the contemporary world – especially those faced by marginalised and “fringe-oriented” communities – seem to be gaining in complexity and momentum. At the same time, ongoing debates and controversial questions prompt many of us to reflect on matters of personal identity, especially as they relate to communication, creative thinking, and the exploration of liminal places in art. Such issues (and why they matter) lie at the heart of Writing from the Fringes.' (Jen Webb, Kimberly K. Williams, Eileen Herbert-Goodall : Editorial introduction) 2025
Last amended 6 Mar 2025 10:00:02
https://textjournal.scholasticahq.com/article/129332-fringe-dwelling-in-autobiographical-memory-writers-perspectives Fringe Dwelling in Autobiographical Memory – Writers’ Perspectivessmall AustLit logo TEXT : The Journal of the Australian Association of Writing Programs
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