Anne Brady-Clark Anne Brady-Clark i(29702166 works by)
Gender: Female
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1 Towards Post-Human Storytelling : Pushing Boundaries in Decentring the Human Stef Rozitis , Dante DeBono , Anne Brady-Clark , Evan Jarrett , Amelia Walker , 2025 single work criticism
— Appears in: TEXT : The Journal of the Australian Association of Writing Programs , February no. 29 2025;
'Can storytelling be(come) post-human? If so, how? This article shares creative insights from a collaborative inquiry at the intersection of queer, neurodivergent, and ecological writing. Writing from the fringes of our various disciplines and levels of precarity within the academy, we came together as a collective of researchers who share an interest in creative methods and an orientation towards storytelling as “a political and heuristic tool” involving “human and nonhuman” processes (Wiame, 2018). We made use of new materialist and posthuman perspectives as we grappled with an empathy that neither anthropomorphises nor objectifies the nonhuman Other, and seeks to portray the agency of a world that does not centre on the human, or not only the human. We sought to rewrite the human as marginal. This work, informed by theories of writing and artmaking as ways of knowing, engaged in poetic inquiry and co/autoethnography. Responding individually to shared creative prompts, we explored possibilities of writing as nonhuman entities. We then compared our writings, observing rhizomatic connections and branchings-out to explore the challenges and possibilities of post- human storytelling. Our article describes these insights and signals unfolding directions for ongoing inquiry and the challenges of storying from the margins of the human.' (Publication abstract)
1 Heterogeneity and Creative Expression: A Creative Writing Artistic Approach to Focus on Emotions Surrounding Disabilities Anne Brady-Clark , Dante DeBono , Kendrea Rhodes , Stef Rozitis , Chloe Cannell , Eugene Tabios , Steph Daughtry , 2025 single work criticism
— Appears in: TEXT : The Journal of the Australian Association of Writing Programs , February no. 29 2025;
'Does heterogeneity matter in creative expression? If so, what impact do creators and disability have on the development of emotive art? Art, of any medium, has the ability to transcend barriers, and therefore it was decided to establish a method to test the skills of gathered creative individuals, to look “beyond convention and prejudice” (Kanari & Souliotou, 2023, p. 294). This paper focuses on collaborative inquiry with members from the Critical Creative Reading and Writing Collective (CCRWC) who have produced and authored the work contained in this paper. Heterogeneity in creativity is significant when investigating the connection between the art, the artist, and the audience. Through methods of applying limitations to our creativity, we produced new pieces of art which demonstrated how limitations can alter the self-perspective of our own creative skills, which was made available through creative inquiry. The outcomes were shared, and positive feedback was sought regarding the differences between the pieces, as interpretation by others can provide new insights for future creativity. Our paper creates a narrative for heterogeneity in the creative space and the importance of continued inquiry when focusing on disabilities.' (Publication abstract)
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