The event is hosted by the Institute of Advanced Studies at UCL at part of my Fellowship in Creative Practice. It’s open to all and registration is via: https://bit.ly/3gzA4IU
On Thursday 3rd June join me, students from UCL and a selection of writers and academics for a roundtable discussion on what poetry-based approaches can bring to academic research.
We’ll be joined by:
Dr Eric Langley (UCL) who will be talking about the relationship between their book of poems Raking Light (Carcanet) and their research in English Literature
Dr Hannah Walters (UCL) who will be talking about using creative methods in her research into the experiences of working-class and first-in-family women students at UCL
Dr Hannah Copley (Westminster) who will be discussing the relationship between writing poetry and their academic practice
Dr Thomas Karshan (UEA) who will be talking about Nabakov and issues of understanding, knowledge and research
On Friday 7th May I will be chairing an event at Homerton College on poetry and climate change.
Meeting the challenges of the climate crisis requires a radical reorganisation of the ways we live, work and play. In this roundtable discussion, artists, publishers, academics and climate activists will explore how creativity, particularly poetry, might help us to create bold new ways of thinking, being and doing.
The panel will feature the poets Jade Cuttle, Ella Duffy and Mariah Whelan, the editor Kate Simpson, academics and students from Homerton College, Cambridge as well as activists who are all invited to reflect on how poetry can help us rise to the challenges we are already facing and will continue to face over the coming decades.
Can art make a difference? How can we use creativity to mobilise emotion and affect real systematic change? Are there places where poetry falls short? Over an hour and a half, we will hear from our panel of experts before opening up for group discussion.
For almost 800 years the sonnet has been a mainstay of English-language poetry. In a 6-week course for Literature Cambridge, I’ll be guiding students as we trace the form’s development from its earliest incarnations in English to contemporary examples of this flexible and diverse poetic form.
This March I will be joining the Institute of Advanced Studies at University College London as a Fellow in Creative Practice.
The purpose of the fellowship is to use creative methodologies to intervene in our ideas about knowledge production in academic contexts. I’ll be carrying out interdisciplinary research and teaching undergraduate and postgraduate students about using poetry-writing methods in their academic practice.
On Thursday 25th of February I’ll be headlining an open mic hosted by Writers in Oxford. Head over to https://www.writersinoxford.org/ for details of how to join.
Last term, during Homerton’s Wellbeing and Mental Health Week, I wrote a new poem that thinks about pain and openness. You can hear me reading it over on the UoC Facebook page:
Over the past six months I’ve had the very great pleasure of getting to know the brilliant Ellen Hinsey. An award-winning poet and academic, Hinsey and I discussed poetry, ‘truth telling’ and the interdisciplinary nature of her work.
You can read the interview in full here, read Ellen’s poems here and read my editorial by clicking here.