Tuesday 1 September 2015

Welcome to the 15/16 year at UCA!


Hello there everyone!

It’s your course leader Craig Jordan-Baker here, back after an exciting summer of creative projects, writing and of course planning for the new year. I’d like to give everybody a lowdown on the main developments in creative writing here at UCA, along with what I’ve been up to over the summer.

What have I been doing?
That’s a good question, and I am glad you asked. Since May, I have been busy with a number of projects. In June, I was a speaker at the Great Writing Conference 2015 in Imperial College, London.  This in an annual international gathering for writers and creative writing academics and I presented a paper on ‘Peter Abbs and Aesthetic Education’, which considered the relationships between the arts and what this means for creative writing. I’ll be presenting on a related subject at the annual NAWE conference in Durham this November. 
I was also very happy to have a paper of mine entitled ‘The Philosophy of Creative Writing’ published in New Writing: The International Journal of Creative Writing Theory and Practice. This was a piece developed at the Great Writing conference last year and concerns some of the problems of creative writing as an autonomous discipline within the academy. All UCA students should have access to the journal via their Athens login and the paper can be found at the following links:

http://www.tandfonline.com/doi/pdf/10.1080/14790726.2015.1047854

Another thing I’ve done is to spend two weeks in the wonderful city of Edinburgh, as part of the Fringe. Two of my shows were at the festival, one being an adaptation of the Anglo-Saxon poem ‘Beowulf’ and the other a children’s show, ‘The Tale of Tommy O’Quire’. Both shows got good reviews and you can find some links here:


Myself and actor Tom Dussek were also interviewed for Fringe Review about our work, the fringe and ideas of poetry and storytelling. Here’s the link if you are interested:


And what do I think of Edinburgh? Well, to put it mildly, Edinburgh is an intense environment with over 3,500 shows to choose from, bars open until 5am, constant street shows, deep-fried Mars bars, crying actors, pockets full of flyers and daily grind of making sure your show goes up on time, comes down on time and that you have not sunk into terrible poverty. This Fringe was my first as a practitioner (writer) and I realise, now having done it, that I stayed away for some very good reasons. There is much you can get from the Fringe in terms of reviews, developing relationships and seeing some amazing work. However, your fortitude is constantly tested as you are always active, always worried, always thinking about what has immediately just happened and what is immediately to come. Some people seem used to this (seem), but I find it mildly hard to believe that their souls are not being slowly scraped out with a penknife, as there is so little time for reflection or repose.
                Overall, an experience I may well repeat once memory had blunted the sharpness of experience.

New Staff

As many of you will be (painfully) aware, in the first year of creative writing, you only had the debatable pleasure of having me to deliver creative writing. Well, change comes inevitably and I am genuinely happy to announce that UCA has employed two new Sessional Lecturers in creative writing. Dr Richard Hawtree and Samantha Talbot will be joining us and will be delivering the year 2 unit, ‘Developing a Writer’s Voice’ in term 1 and then will be taking Year 1 for ‘Poetry and Poetics’ in term 2. Here are their biographies:

Dr Richard Hawtree
 
Richard took his primary degree in English Language and Literature at Exeter College, Oxford. He next travelled to Ireland where he studied Old and Middle English poetry, work that culminated in a 2009 Ph.D at University College Cork concerning the tenth-century Exeter Book manuscript. From 2010 onwards he acted as a post-doctoral fellow with the Irish Research Council-funded ‘Christ on the Cross’ project, examining textual and material representations of the Crucifixion in Ireland from 800-1200 A.D.
Research interests include the history of reading, manuscript studies, and the varied uses of the past in contemporary British and Irish poetry. His own poems, often inspired by the metaphysical tradition, have appeared in literary magazines including: Scintilla, The Penny Dreadful, Brain of Forgetting, and The Weary Blues.   

Samantha Talbot

Sam is a writer and artist with a background in interdisciplinary research and practice in the creative arts. She has a BA (Hons) Fine Art Painting (Winchester), Cambridge CELTA, PGCTEAP (Nottingham) and an MLitt in Creative Writing (Glasgow). Since 2006, she has held positions as Lecturer and Teaching Fellow in EAP at the University of Nottingham, Nottingham Trent University, the University of Bath, INTO University of East Anglia and the University of Sheffield, respectively, and has worked in Literature Development at Nottingham Writers’ Studio.
At UCA, Sam lectures on the BA Hons in Creative Writing and Journalism course, and the International Foundation, Graduate Diploma and Pre-Sessional programmes in Art and Design. Research and teaching interests include facilitating creative and critical writing in the various disciplines and across cohorts; the personal essay; narrative non-fiction; autobiographical fiction; the journey as metaphor; travel literature; image and text; final major projects and exhibitions; editing and publication: anthologising; and the fictionalised travelogue. As part of the Creative Writing team here at UCA, she also facilitates the ‘Scrivener Series’ of external talks and is about to embark upon an interdisciplinary and practice-based PhD. 

Plans for the new year

Finally, the 15/16 year will hold some new things and here’s a short overview of what we will be up to:

1.       The Scrivener Series. The Scrivener Series returns with a series of talks and readings from established writers. Speakers will be announced very soon, but I can promise some fine writers will be visiting UCA!

2.       Acting and Performance. The new Acting and Performance course under the leadership of Ruth Torr will have its first intake this year, and I have organised some opportunities this year for CW students to work with AAP students to have their work developed into short pieces. This will provide invaluable experience for writers and actors alike.

3.       Creative Residencies. We have some creative residencies coming to UCA in term 1, which will appeal to CWers. Firstly, artist Daksha Patel returns to deliver workshops around text and image and students will have the change to explore the synergies between the written and the drawn. Secondly, we will have a week of linked workshops looking at puppetry, direction, music and theatre production from Atomic Force Productions. This will primarily appeal to CWers wanting to explore some of the practical elements of performance and how it might relate to their own writing.

4.       Winter School. There will also be an opportunity for five CW students to attend a new winter writing school at UCA in December. This will involve CW students, other UCA students interested in writing and HE students from the local area. We will engage in a compact writing programme exploring the development of technique and an introduction to some of the fundamental forms of literature.  More info on this soon….

That’s about it! Welcome to the new year at UCA!

Craig

1 comment:

  1. Seems like a richly diverse programme this year, hence I cannot wait to get stuck-in!

    ReplyDelete