My Mind Words Paper [Search results for creative writing

  • Random House Struik Creative Writing Short Course (South Africa)

    Deadline: 29 July 2011

    The Random House Struik creative writing course is a 10-week online course intended for anyone with an interest in writing: published writers, aspirant authors and those who have dreamed of writing a novel or story but never quite knew where to start. It focuses specifically on learning the tools and tricks of the trade that will help you get your work published under this new imprint, and is presented on GetSmarter’s advanced and user-friendly learning model, which provides students with a personal and professional educational experience.

    Registrations close: 29 July 2011
    Course begins: 8 August 2011
    Cost: R6,600 (excl. VAT)
    7 hours per week

    The course in a nutshell:

    * Teaches you the techniques of good story writing for fiction and non-fiction
    * Highly practical, with five written pieces completed during the course
    * 10-week part-time course presented online throughout South Africa
    * Continuous guidance, monitoring and assistance provided by the Course Convener and Course Coordinator
    * Form part of a creative online writing community
    * Top manuscripts will be submitted to Random House Struik for consideration

    About Random House Struik:

    Random House Struik is the largest general trade publisher in southern Africa, following the recent merger of Random House and Struik Publishers. The Random House Group is one of the world's largest book publishing companies and operates in the UK, Australia, Europe, India, New Zealand, USA, Canada, South America and has now joined forces with Struik Publishing in South Africa.

    Why should you take this creative writing course? Ron, the Course Convener, explains:

    Course modules:

    Module 1 Planning the story
    Module 2 The importance of beginnings
    Module 3 Characters and characterisation
    Module 4 Plot vs. story
    Module 5 Dialogue
    Module 6 Point of view
    Module 7 Conflict
    Module 8 Revision
    Module 9 Tying it all up
    Module 10 Approaching publishers and agents with your finished work

    Who should attend this course?

    This creative writing course is designed for anyone who wants to bring more flair, drama and passion to their writing. It is ideal for anyone who has dreamed of writing a novel or a short story, for accomplished writers of fiction who want to brush up on their skills and for non-fiction writers who want to use dramatic storytelling techniques to make their work come alive. Professional editors can also benefit from this course by learning the basic techniques of the creative craft of writing.

    For more details, please contact:

    Contact person: Amy-Jane
    Telephone: +27 (0)21 447 7565
    Email: amyjane@getsmarter.co.za

    Contact Information:

    For inquiries: amyjane@getsmarter.co.za

    For submissions: register here

    Website: http://www.randomstruik.co.za/

  • The Write Voice: a Creative Writing Workshop for Storytellers (South Africa)

    Dates: 31 May - 21 June 2011

    Find your voice as a writer and speak your mind.

    Storytellers who want to flex their creative muscle can sharpen their storytelling skills at The Write Voice creative writing workshop that takes place on Tuesday evenings from 5.30pm until 8.30pm on May 31 and June 7, 14, and 21 at The Writing Studio in Greenpoint, Cape Town.

    The Write voice explores the writing process and deconstructs writing fiction, non-fiction and journalism. It is ideal for anyone who needs a jump start and take that step forward in writing creatively; during the workshop scribes will have the opportunity to write a short story and get positive feedback through practical and motivational exercises.

    The workshop rallies storytellers to get into the habit of writing daily and turn inspiration into profit! To transform mundane, meaningless and empty words into profound, provocative and life-changing self expression!

    It explores the storyteller’s inner journey that will enrich thematic purpose and dramatically alter the meaning of storytelling and injects a fresh sensibility into stories that reflect the uniqueness of culture, history and experience.

    The Write Voice inspires storytellers to get in touch with who they are and write stories that will reflect the uniqueness of their culture, history and experience.

    This unique creative injection for storytellers is about writing from the inside-out and sharpens the creative focus, intensifies the creative process, and maximizes writers’ ‘me-time’.

    The trainer is Daniel Dercksen, who has been a film and theatre journalist in South Africa the past 30 years and as a trainer and educator has presented regular workshops in scriptwriting and creative writing during the past 17 years.

    The workshop is also done via correspondence for writers who will be travelling or living outside Cape Town.

    For more information on The Write Voice workshop that takes place on May 31 and June, 7, 14 and 21 from 5.30pm until 8.30pm,send and email to daniel@writingstudio.co.za, visit the website: www.writingstudio.co.za, or call Daniel on 072 474 1079

    Contact Information:

    For inquiries: daniel@writingstudio.co.za, info@writingstudio.co.za or SMS 072 474 1079

    Website: http://www.writingstudio.co.za

  • Call for Entries for Proposed Free Creative Writing Course: Society of Young Nigerian Writers

    Deadline: 31 May 2012

    The Society of Young Nigerian Writers welcome entries from Young Nigerian Writers between the ages of 15 and 35 who resides in the country or abroad. This contest is organized in order to make a free and simple creative writing correspondence course by e-mail for upcoming and aspiring young Nigerian Writer. The fifty shortlisted entries, mainly poems, short stories and one act plays will be transformed into the Society’s proposed Free Creative Writing Correspondence Course by e-mail. Entries are free. A writer can only submit one work per genre.

    MODE OF SUBMISSION

    Poetry

    Form: Sonnet, Lyric, Ode, Ballad, Epic, Dirge – not less than 40 lines
    Language: Entries must be in English Language

    Drama

    Form: Comedy, Tragedy, Tragi-comedy, Farce – One Act Play
    Language: Entries must be in English Language

    Prose/Short Stories

    Form: Fiction, Science fiction, detective, horror – 1000 words
    Language: Entries must be in English Language

    ELIGIBILITY

    • Entrants must be between the ages of 15 and 35. The following information must be included:

    1. Age
    2. Telephone Number
    3. Address
    4. Short Profile
    5. Web link of works
    6. Where he/she heard about the contest
    7. Short comment/advice on the proposed course.

    • Submit entries online to: societyofyoungnigerianwriters@gmail.com

    • Submission deadline: May 31st, 2012.

    • Individual participant should include his/her letter of permission to make use of his or her entry(s).

    BENEFITS FOR ALL PARTICIPANTS

    • Award of Certificates of Participation to all participants

    BENEFITS FOR ALL SHORTLISTED PARTICIPANTS

    * Award of Certificate of Excellence + 1 year free membership of the Society (Automatic Associate Membership if unpublished), (Automatic Full Membership if published).

    AIMS AND OBJECTIVES OF THE PROPOSED CORRESPONDENCE COURSE

    • To promote creative writing and works of Nigerian Writers between the ages of 15 and 35.
    • To contribute toward the growth and development of creative writing among Young Nigerian Writers.
    • To encourage creative writers and literary artists
    • To give recognition, reward and award (RRA) to deserving writers
    • To highlight the roles of creative writing in the Society.

    CONTACT INFORMATION:

    For inquiries: societyofyoungnigerianwriters@gmail.com

    For submissions: societyofyoungnigerianwriters@gmail.com

    Website: societyforyoungwriters.webs.com

  • Association of Young Nigerian Writers Free Creative Writing Workshop

    Date: 29 March 2012

    In a statement released yesterday by the National President of the Society Mr. Wole Adedoyin after a brief National Executive Council Meeting. In a bid to fulfill one of our aims and objectives which is stipulated in the Society’s constitution (organizing literary and creative writing workshops and conferences for the development of our members). The Society is now embarking on organizing a free creative writing workshop for upcoming and aspiring Young Nigerian Writers. The creative writing workshop promises to be an avenue for grooming and enhancing the skills and literary techniques of upcoming and aspiring writers in the country. The proposed creative writing workshop will also allow Young and talented Nigerian writers between the ages of 7 and 35 to get their works published as some notable independent publishers will be on the ground to access and collect unpublished manuscripts for publication after the agreement between the publishers and the writers.

    There are many talented and upcoming writers in the country who are eager to write and waiting to get their works published. Some of them have never written any works due to their inability and lack of technical know-how. An enabling ground should be created for upcoming and aspiring writers to sharpen and hone their literary skills and creativity which is the gap we are filling.

    Expected Guest lecturers at the workshop include: Dr. Remi Adedokun, former H.O.D, Theatre Arts Department, and University of Ibadan who will be talking on – Writing an award winning children drama. Also, Mr. Freeman Okosun, the National President of Biographers’ Collectives will be talking on the Fundamentals of book publishing and marketing while the present Vice-Chairman of the Association of Nigerian Authors, Oyo State Chapter, Mr. Akeem Ajibade will be talking on writing a world acclaimed Children Poetry anthology and short stories.

    Registration is free. Participants will also collect free workshop materials and certificate of participation. Interested participant should text his/her name, age, genre interested in and their location to societyofyoungnigerianwriters@gmail.com or 08072673852. For more information log on to www.societyforyoungwriters.webs.com.

    Venue : Amphi-Theatre, by-main gate, along Ebrohime Road, University of Ibadan.

    Time : 1.00PM

    CONTACT INFORMATION:

    For inquiries: societyofyoungnigerianwriters@gmail.com

    Website: www.societyforyoungwriters.webs.com

  • Verbana Creative Writing Workshop with Ebi Akpeti (Nigeria)

    Verbana Creative Writing Workshop with Ebi Akpeti (Nigeria)

    Deadline: 25 July 2011

    Verbana Servicing Outfit, an upscale brand management and public relations outfit, is organizing a free creative writing interactive community as part of its empowerment CSR initiative, in partnership with various organizations, NGO’s and corporate bodies, with logistics support from Art World. The forum will be hosted by Ebi Akpeti, author “The Perfect church”.

    The set goals and objectives is to develop the basic understanding of the literary genre, especially in the dynamics of plots, styles and theme, fiction or nonfiction, with an aim to “preserve Nigeria’s literary tradition which was made world famous by Nobel laureate Wole Soyinka, Chinua Achebe, Ben Okri, Niyi Osundare, Chimamanda Adichie etc.

    The series which is scheduled to take place on the 30th of July 2011 would be an avenue to address the creative writing challenges faced in Nigeria such as degenerating reading culture, plagiarism and poor copyright protection – all of which rob writers and artists of their benefits and several other challenges.

    Various creative writing modules will be implemented at this workshop such as Narrative theory practice, Narratives from life, Individual writing project, reading and writing, discussion of creative writing process and the role of literature in the society and also be an opportunity to get published.

    The work shop is a part of a developmental campaign that will be implemented across the nation to harness skills and potentials.

    How to Register?

    Send your name, age, phone number and a one page explanation about your motivation to attend the forum as well a short description of any story your currently working on, to GOTASTORY@EBIAKPETI.COM, not later than the 25th of July 2011.

    About the host:

    Ebi Akpeti is an alumnus of the Massachusetts institute of Technology (MIT) professional education. She has a master’s degree in Media and Communications from the Pan African University in Nigeria and also in Finance from the University of Calabar. Ebi has three novels to her credit and currently works in the corporate affairs department of one of Africa’s biggest banks.

    A 2006 nominee of the Capital Market Reporter of the prestigious Nigerian Media Merit Award NMMA Award, NMMA for her story "Trigger for Fraud", Ebi is also the author of "The Perfect Church which was recently adapted into a screen play by multiple award winning producer, Mr Wale Adenuga. The movie is reputed to be one of the most expensive movies in recent time showing all over Nigeria, Ghana, Kenya and Botswana. She is currently working on a fiction story on the indigenes and militancy in the Niger Delta area of Nigeria entitled "For the Sake of Peremoboere

    Contact Information:

    For inquiries: gotastory@ebiakpeti.com

    For submissions: gotastory@ebiakpeti.com

    Website: http://www.ebiakpeti.com/

  • 3rd Fidelity Bank International Creative Writing Workshop (Nigeria)

    Deadline: 20 June 2012

    This year’s edition of our International Creative Writing Workshop is the 3rd in a series of efforts to redirect the energy of Nigerian youths to those values that once made Nigeria great. The workshop is also an important component of Fidelity’s Corporate Social Responsibility CSR through which the bank continues to push for a better society.

    Participants will be expected to read and discuss a wide range of fiction and non-fiction, as well as complete short writing exercises. Participation in the forthcoming workshop is limited to those who apply and are accepted. A public symposium featuring readings and panel discussions will be held on the last day of the workshop.

    To apply, send an e-mail to - creative.writing@fidelitybankplc.com Your e-mail subject should bear the title – Workshop Application. The body of the e-mail should contain the following:

    1. Your name.
    2. Your address.
    3. A few sentences about yourself.
    4. A writing sample of between 200 and 800 words.

    Please indicate whether your sample is fiction or non-fiction. Acceptance will be based on the quality of the writing sample. All writing material must be pasted or written in the body of the e-mail. Do NOT send any attachments. Applications with attachments will be automatically disqualified. If accepted, you will be notified by July 4, 2010

    CONTACT INFORMATION:

    For inquiries/ submissions: creative.writing@fidelitybankplc.com

    Website: http://www.fidelitybankplc.com

  • British Red Cross International Day of the Disappeared Creative Writing Competition

    Deadline: 30 August 2011

    The International Day of the Disappeared (30 August) is a reminder that a great number of people are missing as a result of conflicts around the world.

    Each year, the Red Cross marks the day by commemorating those who have gone missing in armed conflicts or other situations of violence – and remembers the plight of their families.

    Creative writing competition

    The International Day of the Disappeared (30 August) commemorates people who have gone missing throughout the world in situations of violence and armed conflict. It is a reminder of the hundreds of thousands of families who are unaware of the fate of their loved ones, and organisations like the Red Cross who work to restore family contact between separated family members.

    Give your voice to the thousands of missing people throughout the world by entering our creative writing competition.

    Rules

    There are only two rules:

    1. Your writing should be based on the theme of ‘the disappeared’.
    2. It should fit onto one side of A4 paper.

    So this could be poetry, prose, a comic strip, a short story, an excerpt from your diary, a song... anything at all that you can write on the chosen theme.

    Entries can be either typed or handwritten. Drawings and illustrations are welcomed, but remember – this is a creative writing competition – so these should accompany your message, not be the message. Translations from any language into English are also welcomed, either your own work or that of a friend.

    The competition is open to everyone and all ages. The deadline is 30 August.

    Prizes and judging

    The winning entry will receive a £50 cash prize and a £50 national book voucher.

    A compendium of the top entries will be compiled and published for International Day of the Disappeared 2012. All authors of published entries will receive a free copy.

    Entries will be judged by a small panel of judges, including local authors and Red Cross representatives.

    How to enter

    You can enter by emailing your work to entries@redcross.org.uk or by posting it to:

    Creative writing competition
    British Red Cross
    Bradbury House
    Apple Lane
    Sowton Industrial Estate
    Exeter
    Devon
    EX2 7HA
    Terms and conditions

    1. Entries must be original, unpublished and not accepted for publication. They should be written in English.
    2. The name and address of the entrant should be clearly listed separately from the entry itself.
    3. Receipt of entry will be given by email if a valid email address is supplied.
    4. A list of commended entries and the winner will be posted on this website, and sent out by email to addresses provided.
    5. Copyright will remain with the author, but the British Red Cross reserves the right to publish any winning or commended entries after the end of the competition.
    6. The winning entry will be announced within a month of the deadline on 30 August, 2011.
    7. The judges' decision is final and no correspondence will be entered into regarding the results.
    8. Submitted entries will not be returned.
    9. Neither the judges nor competition organisers are eligible to enter the competition.

    Contact Information:

    For inquiries: entries@redcross.org.uk

    For submissions: entries@redcross.org.uk

    Website: http://www.redcross.org.uk

  • Call for Essays/ Creative Writing: Feminist Studies Journal's "Africa Reconfigued" Issue

    Deadline: 1 December 2012

    AFRICA RECONFIGURED

    How does feminist scholarship on African regions push conventional disciplinary boundaries? How does feminist work in cinema studies, linguistics, cultural studies, literature, history, and anthropology, for example, reconfigure how Africa is represented in the broader academy? Feminist Studies welcomes submissions on a variety of topics dealing broadly with the continent of Africa, with the goal of featuring exciting feminist scholarship in African Studies and questioning representations of Africa for feminist readers outside the area.

    We welcome full-length research manuscripts (10,500 words), review essays, short commentaries on polices, creative writing, and art essays. Please e-mail Editorial Director Ashwini Tambe to signal your interest in submitting material.

    Deadline for submitting manuscripts: December 1, 2012.

    RESEARCH AND CRITICISM

    Feminist Studies publishes research and criticism that address theoretical issues and offer analyses of interest to feminist scholars across disciplines. Although many, if not most, of the articles we publish draw on the methodology of a single discipline, we especially encourage scholars to pursue truly interdisciplinary research and research methodologies that not only showcase but integrate contributions from multiple disciplines.

    Submissions should not exceed 10,500 words, approximately 35 pages, including endnotes. Please consult the 16th edition of the Chicago Manual of Style for proper manuscript form and endnote citation style.

    How to Submit:

    For your submission to be complete, please send all of the following:

    • One double-spaced hard copy mailed to Feminist Studies, 0103 Taliaferro Hall, University of Maryland, College Park, MD 20742. (In order to protect anonymity, the author's name should appear only a separate title page and not on the manuscript itself.)
    • An electronic copy to submit@feministstudies.org. (Alternatively, you may include a CD with the mailed hard copy.) Please send the electronic file as a Word or WordPerfect document, not as a PDF.
    • A 200-word (or fewer) abstract
    • A cover note with mailing and e-mail addresses.

    CREATIVE WRITING

    Feminist Studies is deeply committed to publishing creative work. Beginning with our very first issue published in 1972, we have included creative work in every issue. We have published such distinguished authors as Meena Alexander, Nicole Brossard, Jayne Cortez, Toi Derricotte, Diane Glancy, Marilyn Hacker, Lyn Hejinian, June Jordan, Audre Lorde, Cherrie Moraga, Sharon Olds, Grace Paley, Ruth Stone, and Mitsuye Yamada.

    We continue to welcome all forms of written creative expression, including but not limited to poetry and short fiction in all forms. We are interested in work that addresses questions of interest to the Feminist Studies audience, particularly work that pushes past the boundaries of what has been done before. We look for creative work that is intellectually challenging and aesthetically adventurous, that is in complicated dialogue with feminist ideas and concepts, and that shifts our readers into new perspectives on women/gender.

    We only consider original work that is not under review elsewhere. Since creative work will not be returned, authors should retain a copy of their work. If other work is cited in the piece, please use our citation style. Because of space constraints we are unable to publish individual pieces that run longer than 25 pages.

    Deadlines for submission of creative work are May 1 and December 1. After each deadline, all work will be reviewed by our creative writing editor. Her recommendations will then be read anonymously by our editorial collective who will make the final decisions. Authors will receive notice of the collective's decision by mid-July and mid-February.

    How to Submit:

    • Mail one hard copy to Feminist Studies, 0103 Taliaferro Hall, University of Maryland, College Park, MD 20742.
    • E-mail an electronic version of your work to creative@feministstudies.org.

    CONTACT INFORMATION:

    For inquiries: submit@feministstudies.org

    For submissions: submit@feministstudies.org or creative@feministstudies.org (see "How to Submit" above for further instructions)

    Website: http://www.feministstudies.org

  • AllAboutWriting's September Creative Writing Course (South Africa)

    Date: 27 September 2011

    Do you have an idea for a book, a screenplay you would love to be writing, a project you are struggling with, a novel in progress or an unfinished manuscript?

    Here’s a course designed to rev you up for a challenging writing project – or, more simply, to help you re-engage with your creative self.

    Who will benefit?

    Anyone wanting to start(or finish) a novel, a screenplay, or a work of creative non-fiction.

    Those with no specific project in mind, but who long to unlock their creative selves.

    What is the course about?

    The course is designed to help participants explore their creativity – and equip them with essential writing skills.

    We’ll also encourage you to submit samples of your work for constructive assessment during a round-table discussion involving all the participants.

    The first hour of every meeting will cover writing dos and don’ts. The second will be spent workshopping, mentoring and troubleshooting works in progress.

    Course content:

    Each 2 ½ hour session tackles a key skill and challenges participants with carefully crafted writing exercises, to which we’ll give immediate feedback. The skills focused on are:

    Finding your “voice”

    Generating ideas

    Building the narrative

    Point of view

    Building characters

    Beginnings, middles and ends

    Writing scenes

    Creating suspense

    Showing, not telling

    Writing dialogue

    Our next course starts on 27 September 2011 in Parkview, Johannesburg.

    If you miss a session we will email you our detailed online course notes and you will get personal feedback on the exercise at the following session.

    The Creative Writing Course is also available online or via correspondence.

    COST AND BOOKING DETAILS

    To book your place please email trishurquhart@gmail.com or call Trish on 0826524643

    R 5 500.00 per person for the ten sessions. To secure your place a deposit of R2 750.00 is payable.

    COURSE DESCRIPTION

    Finding your voice – This module gives you the techniques to fight self-consciousness. How to use skills such as free-writing and personal myth-making to develop a unique style and voice. Learn the skills to avoid self-judgment and to write with flair.

    How journaling can help your writing. This is your private space to write without censure. How to use it to develop a writer’s consciousness. How to view the world like a writer, developing the writer’s particular quality of observance. How to translate that observance into text, practising finding the words to express the experience of the senses.

    Ideas – where the come from and how to develop them – How to form your initial ideas. We examine where writers have looked for their ideas. Where do they start – with characters, stories or settings?

    Develop them creatively, using skills such as brainstorming, index cards and story-boarding. How to develop your personal brainstorming skills, whether you have access to other people or are doing it alone.

    What is the story? – No matter how “plot- or character-driven”, every narrative will contain certain elements that we expect of a story. If an element is fudged or, in experimental writing, implied or left out altogether, it needs to be done artfully and for effect, in order to achieve something.

    This is equally true for fiction and non-fiction. The successful creative non-fiction writer should be equally concerned with the elements of narrative, constructing a plot through careful selection of the material available to him.

    Elbert Hubbard said that life was just one damned thing after another. This is not what we want in a story (nor, in fact, is it the ideal way of looking at life). Every story must have an arc that draws us through it.

    Point of view – Literary point of view is far more complex in effect than was ever suggested by the grammatical treatment of POV we were taught in school.

    The decision you make on point of view is a crucial one. Change point of view and it will fundamentally alter the nature of your work. This module deals, in great detail, with the ways in which different literary POVs have been used, with many examples.

    All points of view have advantages and drawbacks. But even some of those drawbacks can be used to your advantage. We look at these advantages and disadvantages in all their complexity.

    We show how POV can assist you in fiction and creative non-fiction. We look at changes to approach and how our reactions to different POVs have changed over the past decades. We show the difference between changing perspectives and points of view. We deal with successful POV switching, unreliable narrators, and some more experimental uses of POV.

    Building characters (real or fictional) – Characters are the most important part of any narrative. If they don’t hold us, if we don’t find them compelling, we won’t be drawn into their story.

    Characters drive plot. The story should flow out of who they are and how they react. As readers, we should believe the story exists only because of the people – the way they act, and how they react to events around them.

    How do they act and react to what is said and done around them? It should make sense to us in psychological terms.

    In this module, we encourage you to look at what forms people; what makes them tick. Then we transfer that knowledge to the development of characters that stand out from the page. We show you how to build compelling, psychologically believable people who will drive readers to discover how they drive the story forward and what happens to them.

    Beginnings and Middles – Once you have developed your characters and worked out the elements of your story, you are ready to begin. But where should that be?

    This module looks at the importance of the first line, the first page and the first chapter (or equivalent). What are the jobs they should do? How best can they draw readers in and feed them just enough to keep them reading.

    Then we look at the book’s basic structure. How can it most successfully be told? Is it best told chronologically, or by starting in the middle, or just before the final climax. We take a look at some of the basics of keeping a story moving through the middle. How to avoid the dreaded sag, how to vary your pacing and avoid exposition.

    Writing in Scenes - This module deals with the greatly under-rated, hugely important building block of any narrative: the scene.

    This is an important skill for the writers of fiction and non-fiction. When people talk of creative non-fiction having borrowed from the skills of fiction, this is the most important of them.

    What do we mean by “writing in scenes”, and how do we do it? The scene is the most basic element of “showing” rather than “telling”. It eliminates the distance between your reader and the action. It drops readers into the middle of the action – to experience and interpret it for themselves.

    If your story is a castle, its scenes are the bricks you will use to construct it.

    Suspense - The word “suspense” tends to make us think of plot-driven thrillers. But our definition is wide. We like to see it as anything that draws the reader forward. This is as relevant for non-fiction writers as for novelists.

    In this Module, we look at the ways in which you can create an appetite for events yet to be described – a tension between the present moment, and the anticipated moment.

    There is no story without some form of conflict. It’s the essential ingredient that keeps us reading. Something is at stake, and the equilibrium is disturbed. In life, we long for equilibrium (unless we’re a war correspondent). But in stories, when equilibrium is achieved, the story ends.

    People often misunderstand the concept of literary conflict – seeing it only as a battle or a fight. In this module, with extensive examples, we look at the elements of literary conflict, and what can create it.

    Showing not telling – This module presents a central truth about good writing: it is almost always better to show your story and your characters, than to tell us about them.

    When you tell your readers something, you’re explaining it to them. When you show your readers, you allow them to see, hear, taste or smell it. From this, your engaged and active readers make their own deductions about the people and events you’ve shown them.

    In this module, we analyse exactly what we mean by “showing”. And we look at the different ways in which we can achieve it. With extensive examples, we look at ways of showing your carefully developed characters, without having to explain them. We look at how their setting tells us not just about their world, but the kind of people they are.

    We look at detail … in detail. Every detail has a job to do, whether it exists for textural reasons, or to show us more about characters or situations.

    Dialogue and wrap-up - A story can succeed or fail on its dialogue. Badly done, it is actively off-putting. Well done, it can take a mediocre story to another level.

    We look at the uses of dialogue and how to use it well. Dialogue is not speech as it is used in real-life. It is the appearance of real speech. How do you achieve this?

    For more information, email trishurquhart@gmail.com or call Trish on 0826524643

    Contact Information:

    For inquiries: trishurquhart@gmail.com

    Website: http://allaboutwritingcourses.com

  • Open to All Writers: Stanford Creative Writing Program - Wallace Stegner Fellowship (worldwide)

    Deadline: 1 December 2011

    Unique among writing programs, Stanford offers ten two-year fellowships each year, five in fiction and five in poetry. All the fellows in each genre convene weekly in a 3-hour workshop with faculty.

    Fellows are regarded as working artists, intent upon practicing and perfecting their craft. There are no curricular requirements other than workshop attendance and writing. The program offers no degree.

    In awarding fellowships, we consider the quality of the candidate's creative work, potential for growth and ability to contribute to and profit from our writing workshops. The Stanford Creative Writing Program's students are diverse in style and experience, with talent and seriousness the true common denominators.

    To be a Stegner Fellow:

    * we do not require any degrees or tests for admission
    * no school of writing is favored over any other
    * chronological age is not a consideration

    Fellowships include a living stipend of $26,000 per year. In addition, fellows' tuition and health insurance are paid for by the Creative Writing Program. The Stegner Fellowship is a full-time academic commitment, and is not intended to be pursued concurrently with another degree program. Fellows must live close enough to Stanford to be able to attend workshops, readings, and events.

    How to Apply

    We strongly prefer that applicants apply online for the Stegner Fellowship. We will begin accepting applications for Fall 2012 admission on September 1, 2011. Please consult our frequently asked questions page for questions about application content.

    Alternatively, you may still apply for a Stegner Fellowship by mail. To do so, please click here to download and complete our paper application form, then mail it to us together with all required documents between September 1 and December 1, 2011.

    If you have questions about the application process, please read the application form in its entirety and consult our frequently asked questions page. Send further questions to stegnerfellowship@stanford.edu.

    The Stegner Fellowship application deadline for admission in Fall 2012 is December 1, 2011. We will began accepting applications for admission in Fall 2012 on September 1, 2011.

    Contact Information:

    For inquiries: stegnerfellowship@stanford.edu

    For submissions: apply online here

    Website: http://www.stanford.edu

  • 1st Saraba Writing Workshop (Nigeria)

    1st Saraba Writing Workshop (Nigeria)

    Deadline: 23 May 2011

    We are pleased to inform you that our first writing workshop would hold between 26 to 28 May 2011 in Obafemi Awolowo Uinversity, Ile-Ife. The venue for the workshop is the Natural History Museum, which has been described as the most beautiful building in Africa’s most beautiful campus.

    This workshop is not designed for established writers – or writers with a book ready for publishers. It is designed for young people (and old?) who think they are talented, or have been told so. More importantly, it is designed for those who want to horn their talent into a craft, who wish to think of their writing as a carpenter thinks of furniture.

    The Workshop is divided into General Sessions and Genre-based Sessions. General Sessions is to focus on the general creative life, contemporary creative and artistic indulgencies as well as reflections on the work of an artist. This aim is to be reflected in the general reading list as well as the conversations (between facilitators) discussions (facilitators and participants), talks (by various facilitators) and exposure to creative content (audio, video and slide presentations.)

    In Genre-based Sessions, participants are split into the genres they indicated interest in – Poetry, Fiction or Non-Fiction. Participants are not allowed to register for more than one genre. Facilitators in the respective genres are to conduct these sessions, with emphasis on reviewing the work produced by participants, and discussing quality work by more established writers. Although our focus is on writers resident in Ile-Ife, the workshop is also open to writers outside Ile-Ife. However, we would not cater for the accommodation and feeding (aside breakfast) of any participant outside Ile-Ife.

    Application: Application deadline is 23 May. There is space for only 40 participants, so apply early.

    Complete the Application Form, and submit via email (sarabaworkshop@gmail.com) after payment of the WorkshopFee. Your letter of invitation would be sent upon confirmation of payment.

    Facilitators:

    Ayobami Famurewa (Fiction) is currently pursuing a Master’s in Literature in English at the Obafemi Awolowo where she obtained a Bachelors’ degree in 2008. Her short stories have been published in African Writing Online, Farafina Magazine, Saraba Magazine, The Weaverbird Anthology of New Nigerian Fiction (Kachifo 2008) and Speaking for Generations: An Anthology of Contemporary African Short Stories (African World Press 2010). She was a participant in the Chimamanda Adichie-Binyavanga Wanaina writers’ workshop that held in Lagos in July 2007. Her writing received an honourable mention in the 2009 Commonwealth short story contest and won the Naija Stories Website launch Contest in 2010. In September, she will be commencing her Masters in Creative Writing at the University of East Anglia.

    Emmanuel Iduma (Fiction) holds a degree in Law from Obafemi Awolowo University, and is currently studying to be called to the Nigerian Bar. His short stories and poems have appeared in African Writer, Story Time, New Black Magazine, Saraba, Itch, Sentinel Nigeria, Daughters of Eve and Other New Short Stories from Nigeria (CCC Press 2010), Speaking for Generations: An Anthology of Contemporary African Short Stories (African World Press 2010), Hack Writers, and is forthcoming in African Roar and MTLS. He was a participant of the Word into Art into Africa workshop organized by the Africa Centre/SPARCK (South Africa). His story was a finalist of the Word in Action International Literary Contest 2008. He won the Naija Stories Independence Day Contest 2010. In September he will be commencing his Masters in Creative Writing at the University of Manchester.

    Dami Ajayi (Poetry) is a final year medical student and immediate past editor-in-chief of the Ifemed Journal Club. A consummate literary enthusiast and co-founder of Saraba literary magazine, he has had his poetry, reviews and short stories published in The Nation, The Guardian, Sunday Sun Revue, African Writing, Hack Writers, Saraba, MTLS, Sentinel Nigeria, Palapala Magazine, African Writer and his short story is forthcoming in African Roar. His first collection of poems, Clinical Blues, will be published next year. He was also a participant of the recently held Bayelsa Book and Craft Fair in Yenagoa.

    Adebiyi Olusolape (Poetry) is a mechanical engineer by training. He often refers to himself as a journeyman collagist who lives at Ibadan, this is his modest way of describing himself as an encyclopaedia of some sort. He is currently the Poetry Editor of Saraba and has been influential to the creation of Saraba’s many intercontinental chapbooks. His poetry has appeared in Maple Tree Literary Supplement, 60 Minutes with the Geeks, and in Saraba. His other works have
    also appeared in several dailies including The Nation.

    Arthur Anyaduba (Non-fiction) obtained a Bachelors’ Degree in English Literature in 2008. He has taught English Literature at Secondary School level. His reviews and criticisms have appeared, to critical acclaim, in 234Next. He is pursuing a Masters’ Degree in Literature in English in Obafemi Awolwo University. He works with Saraba as Fiction Editor.

    Workshop Fee: Three Thousand Five Hundred Naira only (#3, 500)

    Download application form >>

    Download information booklet >>

    Contact Information:

    For inquiries: sarabaworkshop@gmail.com

    For submissions: sarabaworkshop@gmail.com

    Website: http://sarabamag.com

  • The Write Squad Summer Creative Writing Workshop for Teenagers (Korean Cultural Centre, Nigeria)

    Deadline: 10 - 12 August 2011

    The Write Squad, a school based literary club initiative of AROJAH CONCEPTS is organises a 3 days non-residential summer creative writing workshop for students of senior secondary schools in the FCT as part of its Writers in School Programme.

    The workshop which is designed to further horn the writing skills of the 50 students, who showed reasonable writing flair in the course of their participation in the 2010 edition of the Abuja Literature Prizes for FCT Schools will be taken through the basic rudiments of creative writing, focusing on poetry and prose (short & long story)

    Certificates will be presented to all participants at a ceremony on 12th August as part of activities to celebrate International Youth Day 2011.

    We are interested in anyone (individuals or organisations) who is willing to support this venture to please contact us.

    Location: Korean Cultural Centre, 2nd Floor, Rivers House, 83 Ralph Shodeinde Street, opposite Ministry of Finance, Central Business District, Abuja, NIGERIA NG

    Contact Information:

    For inquiries: writesquad@gmail.com

    Website: http://www.writesquad.ning.com/

  • Creative Writing Workshop With Ibrahim Al-Koni, Sefi Atta and Chris Marnewick (South Africa)

    Date: 24 March 2012

    A select group of leading writers from South Africa, Africa and abroad will gather for a thought-provoking week of literary dialogue and exchange of ideas at the Time of the Writer International Writers Festival. Presented by the Centre for Creative Arts (University of KwaZulu-Natal) and made possible through principal funding from the National Lottery Distribution Trust Fund and other valued partners, this 15th edition takes place in Durban between 19th to 24th March.

    During this activity-rich week, audiences can expect to hear the opinions of award-winning writers, from a variety of political and social contexts, on the creative and artistic processes and perspectives which inform their writing. Evening readings, book launches and discussions will take place at the Elizabeth Sneddon Theatre while wide-reaching day programmes (free) are spread across Durban and surrounding areas as part of the festival’s ongoing effort to promote and nurture a culture of reading, writing and creative expression. This includes school visits, a publishing forum, and a range of seminars and workshops.

    SATURDAY 24 MARCH 2012

    11h00 - 12h30
    Coffee Conversation with Leïla Marouane
    Alliance Française, 22 Sutton Crescent, Morningside.
    Tel: 031 312 9582

    12h00 - 13h30
    Creative Writing Workshop: Ibrahim Al-Koni, Sefi Atta, Chris Marnewick - Mission Control, BAT Centre.
    Tel: 031 332 0451

    14h00 - 15h00
    The Lyrics, Art, Political and Cultural Importance of Bob Marley and Reggae: Kwame Dawes - Mission Control, BAT Centre.
    Tel: 031 332 0451

    ELIZABETH SNEDDON THEATRE: EVENING PROGRAMME

    18h45
    Book Launch – Guitar Road, Self-published - Rick Andrew
    Wellington Tavern Deck

    19h30
    Music by Rick and Gill Andrew

    Inner City Stories
    Cynthia Jele (South Africa)
    Kgebetli Moele (South Africa)
    Facilitator: Zukiswa Wanner

    INTERVAL

    Roots, Reggae and Writing
    Colin Channer (Jamaica)
    Kwame Dawes (Ghana/Jamaica)
    Facilitator: Chris Abani

    CONTACT INFORMATION:

    For inquiries:

    For submissions: call 031 332 0451

    Website: http://www.cca.ukzn.ac.za/

  • McGregor Creative Writing Weekend (South Africa)

    Deadline: 22 - 24 July 2011

    Discover the elements of writing that draw readers into a story – and hold them as the narrative unfolds. Conflict flares, characters collide, tension builds to a climactic finale from which a satisfying resolution emerges.

    Internationally published novelist Jo-Anne Richards and award-winning script writer Richard Beynon will lead participants through a series of writing exercises designed to expand creativity and illuminate the secrets to great writing.

    This two day creative writing course is designed to be provocative and fun. The exercises will allow you to explore your world in a new way.

    The course will inspire fiction and non-fiction writers, film and television writers, anyone who is interested in trying their hand at writing, as well as active readers who are interested in expanding their reading pleasure.

    Date: 22 to 24 July 2011

    Venue:Temenos, McGregor, Western Cape

    Cost: R3500 which includes tuition, 2 nights accommodation at Temenos, 2 dinners, 2 breakfasts and 2 lunches as well as teas.

    For more information please email trishurquhart@gmail.com or call Trish on 0826524643

    Contact Information:

    For inquiries: trishurquhart@gmail.com

    Website: http://allaboutwritingcourses.com

  • Abuja Writers Forum's Guest Writer Session: Gimba Kakanda (Nigeria)

    Date: 24 September 2011

    The budding poet, Gimba Kakanda, takes his turn at the highly-acclaimed Guest Writer Session on September 24, 2011. An initiative of the Abuja Writers Forum (AWF), now in its third year, the event holds at the Pen and Pages Bookstore, White House Plaza, Plot 79, Adetokunbo Ademola Crescent, Wuse 2, Abuja and has featured an exciting array of emerging and established writers.

    Kakanda who is is in his mid-twenties, and hails from the Kakandas who inhabit the banks of the River Niger especially the stretch that runs through Niger State, had his primary and secondary education at Minna and Suleja before enrolling in the University of Jos to study geology and aspires to delve into Planetary Science out of passion for the mysteries of creation.

    But it is his other passion, creative writing, which has thrust his name in the limelight via his recent maiden poetry collection, Safari Pants. The poet Obemata in a review of the collection, states that “the complexity of his (Kakanda’s) poetry sure makes him one of the must read poets of his generation…. Divided into five parts: ‘Whistles of aches’, ‘The pain-beats sag into nothingness’, ‘We stitch the drum skin with the muscles of hunger’, ‘Taken away in the dance-past for rhythmic silence, we dancestep on one another,’ and ‘We plant furs on the sore of our depression’, “Safari Pants”, as songs to ‘appease the rage and love of those of those repelled and embraced by the magnetism of [this] writing life’, represents a significant offering to Nigeria’s contemporary poetry .”

    The literary journalist, Henry Akubuiro, also observes that “Kakanda has a way with words. Here is an emerging wordsmith whose forge of semantics takes you unawares… His fine turns of expressions, the felicity of his symbols and his constancy of artistic purpose readily sells him as a poet for the sublime zone. This is a poet you read with a strudel by your side.” Kakanda says “Safari Pants, (was) born in ambiguity; I realized that when I was collecting the poems into a volume. The first concept of safari used in the book is created in thought of the usual safari expedition, used with the respiratory ‘pants’; so, safari pants are the hard breaths, nay struggles we take on our expedition through life. The second face of the title comes from the safari dress; here the safari pant which some of us wear is used to portray a dress that, accidentally, symbolizes troubled life by a particular experience of mine or simply, safari pant is metaphor of drudgery. Actually, the second side of the title came to me during a demonstration in which a lad dressed in safari pant was chased by a dog and had his pant torn by the beast. This quite pricked a poem in me because the safari pants I was used to weren’t a fashion that goes with haughtiness. Nonetheless, interchangeable images of Safari the expedition and Safari the dress is used in this collection; by this I have to say both sides of the meaning fits in, ambiguously, on occasions that the readers conjure their meanings.”

    Kakanda who is currently putting finishing touches to a novel tentatively titled Night Book, hass had essays on literary criticism, review of books and trends, travelogues, poems and reactions to topical issues have published in variousnewspapers, local and international anthologies, andjournals and literary and social websites, including: Leadership, New Nigerian, The Guardian, People’s Daily, Sunday Trust, Tribune, Vanguard, Weekly Trust (Newspapers); Fireflies (2009), Voices from the Sun (2010) (poetry anthologies); Sentinel Nigeria, Prosopisia: An International Journal of Poetry and Creative Writing (Journals); gamji.com, switchedonnaija.com, halftribe.com (websites).

    He is the literary/book analyst of Books & Hills Consultancy, a new literary agency that focuses on linking emerged and emerging writers up with internationally recognised publishers, and, the founding editor of Nupewood, a forthcoming magazine of the Nupe movie industry.

    He was a panelist at the first Bayelsa Book & Craft fair (March, 2011), and won a slot to the 2011 edition of the annual Farafina Creative Writing Workshop facilitated by the novelist, Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie.

    The September 24 Guest Writer Session will include the usual side attractions of poetry performance, mini art exhibition, and a raffle-draw as well as live music. The Abuja Writer’s Forum meets three Sundays each month and hosts a reading on every last Saturday at the International Institute of Journalism and Pen and Pages respectively.

    Abdullahi Abubakar

    Contact Information:

    For inquiries: abujawriters@fastermail.com

    Website: http://www.abujawritersforum.com/

  • Call for Application: Sprouters Free Creative Writing Mentorship Program 2012 (Nigeria)

    SPROUTERS is now accepting applications for her 2012 online mentorship program.

    We would like to invite all interested teenage girls, between the age of ten and twenty, who have a passion for creative writing, to submit an application for Nigeria’s pioneer online mentorship program.

    This is a great opportunity for young writers at any stage of experience to have their talent honed by nine mentors of repute: Unoma Azuah, Ayodele Olofintuade, Ifesinachi Okoli-Okpagu, Abimbola Adelakun, Temitayo Olofinlua, Azafi Omoluabi-Ogosi, Abimbola Dare, Cheluchi Onyemelukwe-Onuobia, and Ugo Chime.

    Mentees will be taken through a robust set of writing and critical analysis skills. They will be directed towards great literary works of fiction and encouraged to understudy these writings. The program will raise awareness on domestic and global issues affecting women and girls, encouraging mentees to write on these subjects.

    SPROUTERS is a yearly program, and is free for all mentees.

    DEADLINE FOR SUBMISSION: First fifty applications. Early submission is therefore strongly advised.

    ENTRY REQUIREMENT:

    1. Must be citizens of Nigeria, resident anywhere in Nigeria.
    2. Must be female.
    3. Must be between the ages of ten to twenty. Older applicants should please send an email to applications@sproutersng.com requesting exemption, and wait for clearance before proceeding with their application.
    4. Must have access to the internet, either owned by them or by someone who would permit them the use of it.
    5. Must have the time and passion to follow it through to the end. This is a long term program.
    All applications must be backed up by verification from a referee. The following are eligible to act as referees: Teachers. Parents. Church leaders. Published writers (books and newspapers). Known editors. Members of Association of Nigerian Authors (ANA), or other writing groups. Referees may be citizens of any country, and do not have to be resident in Nigeria.

    SELECTION OF MENTEES:

    The editor will select a maximum of fifty mentees on the basis of the application submitted, which should include:

    • Uploaded Passport Photo: Use jpeg, jng format. Size should not exceed 300x300.
    • Personal Statement - In no more than 200 words, mentees should tell a little bit of themselves. There is no right or wrong answer.
    • Writing Sample: In no less than 300 and no more than 450 words, showcase your best work (short story/poem). Mentees should choose subjects that interest them the most.
    • All applications must be submitted through the online application form: http://www.sproutersng.com/Applyformentorship.php.
    • Applications must be written in English.

    CONTACT INFORMATION:

    For inquiries: editor@sproutersng.com

    For submissions: click here

    Website: http://www.sproutersng.com/

  • Applications Now Open: The 2012 Farafina Trust Creative Writing Workshop (Nigeria)

    Deadline: 25 June 2012

    Farafina Trust will be holding a creative writing workshop in Lagos, organized by award-winning writer and creative director of Farafina Trust, Chimamanda Adichie, from August 14 to August 24 2012. The workshop is sponsored by Nigerian Breweries Plc. Guest writers, including the Caine Prize-winning Kenyan writer, Binyavanga Wainaina, and Jeffery Allen, will co-teach the workshop alongside Adichie.

    The workshop will take the form of a class. Participants will be assigned a wide range of reading exercises, as well as daily writing exercises. The aim of the workshop is to improve the craft of Nigerian writers and to encourage published and unpublished writers by bringing different perspectives to the art of storytelling. Participation is limited only to those who apply and are accepted.

    SUBMISSION DETAILS:

    All material must be pasted or written in the body of the e-mail. Please DO NOT include any attachments in your e-mail. Applications with attachments will be automatically disqualified. The deadline for submissions is June 25 2012. Only those accepted to the workshop will be notified by July 31 2012. Accommodation in Lagos will be provided for all accepted applicants who are able to attend for the ten-day duration of the workshop. A literary evening of readings, open to the public, will be held at the end of the workshop on August 24, 2012.

    To apply, send an e-mail to Udonandu2012@gmail.com. Your e-mail subject should read: ‘Workshop Application.’

    The body of the e-mail should contain the following:

    1. Your name
    2. Your address
    3. A few sentences about yourself
    4. A writing sample of between 200 and 800 words. The sample can be either fiction or non-fiction.

    CONTACT INFORMATION:

    For inquiries: Udonandu2012@gmail.com

    For submissions: Udonandu2012@gmail.com

    Website: http://farafinatrust.org/

  • Wanted: Women of Color Writers' Workshop Assistant (New York)

    Women of Color Writers' Workshop & Community Seeks Assistant - Parkslope, Brooklyn,

    Assistant Position available for the Women of Color Writers' Workshop. This position is open to women who have a deep interest in writing and a concern for marginalized women writers.

    In exchange for this service, the Assistant will be able to attend all WOC workshops and retreats free of charge - a great opportunity to write creatively with small groups of women writers, share feedback, and work toward personal goals or publishing.

    The Workshop is held once a week in six week cycles. Please Visit www.wocwriters.com for more information or Facebook.

    The position requires a commitment of at least 2 hours a week, with time flexibility. The Asssitant will work assist the director and facilitator to promote the workshop, readings, publications; help with recruitment, publicity, the website, Blogs and other activities related to the workshop and the Writer's community.

    QUALIFICATIONS & REQUIREMENTS:

    Applicants must have good references, be friendly and reliable have good writing skills and enjoy writing in any personally preferred genre - beginners are welcome

    Applicants should be personable, and interested in the art of writing.be well organized, creative, and detail orientedbe capable of meeting deadlines and following through on task

    All women of color are encouraged to apply.

    Please email to OyaBisi@gmail.com, with the following information:

    • a cover letter
    • a brief writing resume that speaks specifically to your writing experience(s) - Beginners are okay
    • a creative writing sample (no more than 1 page)

    Please NO CALLS. Only serious applicants should apply

    CONTACT INFORMATION:

    For inquiries: OyaBisi@gmail.com

    For submissions: OyaBisi@gmail.com

    Website: http://www.wocwriters.com

  • The 2012 Palestine Festival of Literature Opens May 5th in Gaza

    Date: 5 - 9 May 2012 (Gaza), 11 May 2012 (Cairo)

    The Festival will take place in Gaza from May 5th to May 9th, with an event in Ramallah on May 5th and a reprise event in Cairo on May 11th.

    It has been a longstanding aim of the festival to travel to Gaza. Since it started in 2008 PalFest has taken the form of a travelling festival – moving to audiences constrained and divided by Israel’s military occupation, establishing creative links between Palestine and the rest of the world and pitting the power of culture against the culture of power.

    PalFest has tried several times in the past to reach Gaza from the Occupied Palestinian Territories but has never been able to because of the restrictions put in place by the Israeli Occupation. Gaza has been under siege and isolated from the rest of the world since 2007.
    This May, PalFest 2012 will bring a group of writers, educators and artists through the Rafah crossing from Egypt to perform free public events, run workshops with students of varying ages and meet civil society leaders in Gaza.

    PalFest has endorsed the 2004 Palestinian call for the academic and cultural boycott of Israel. PalFest 2012 stands against the siege of Gaza; it is committed to re-invigorating cultural ties between Arab countries, ties that have been eroded for too long. The Festival will be bringing writers and artists from across the Arab world and beyond.

    While the Festival’s primary activities will be taking place in Gaza, PalFest works to retain its active presence in the West Bank. British authors Rachel Holmes and Bee Rowlatt will lead extended creative writing workshops in Birzeit with the Palestine Writing Workshop. They will also be joining Maya Abu el-Hayat, Abd al-Rahim al-Sheikh and Imad Sayrafi on stage at the Sakakini Centre on May 5th. A one-day children’s literature festival will be held during the Festival, with plans for a larger children’s event in the summer.

    Beyond the Festival dates PalFest continues its educational programme through its sister organization the Palestine Writing Workshop, whose activities include regular book clubs, creative writing classes and the creation and maintenance of a library.

    PalFest will be launching a new, bi-lingual website this week. Developed with the support of the UK Arts Council, the site will be profiling new literary talent from across Palestine and the diaspora as well as developing an online space for critical feedback between young writers and more established authors.

    The full list of artists attending PalFest 2012 is:

    • GAZA
    • Ghada Abd el-Al
    • Alaa Abd el-Fattah
    • Suad Amiry
    • Selma Dabbagh
    • Najwan Darwish
    • Amr Ezzat
    • Amin Haddad
    • Tariq Hamdan
    • Nathalie Handal
    • Manal Hassan
    • Khaled Khamissi
    • Jamal Mahjoub
    • Sahar el-Mogy
    • Khaled Najar
    • Youssef Rakha
    • Ahdaf Soueif
    • Hyam Yared
    • Nariman Youssef
    • & the bands Eskenderella, Jafra and al Salam.
    • Birzeit & Ramallah
    • Maya Abu el-Hayat
    • Rachel Holmes
    • Abd al-Rahim al-Sheikh
    • Bee Rowlatt
    • Imad Sayrafi

    Further Information

    PalFest is supported by the Arts Council UK, the Abdalla Foundation, the British Council, the Open Society, the Qattan Foundation, Bloomsbury Qatar Foundation Publishing, Reach out to Asia and individual donors, Rana Sadik, Samer Younis, Fadi Ghandour, Riad Kamal, Zina Jardaneh, Mostafa Beidas, Suhail Sikhtian and Janwa Dajani.

    CONTACT INFORMATION:

    For inquiries: contact@palfest.org

    Website: http://palfest.org

  • Creative Writing Course Developer Wanted for a Private Design College in Westville (South Africa)

    A private design college in Westville is seeking a course developer to assist in developing the following short courses: Non-Fiction Writing, Fiction Writing, Poetry, and Creative Writing. Applicants should send CV by replying to this advertisement.

    CONTACT INFORMATION:

    For submissions: apply here (you will find the application tool on the right sidebar)

  1. Journalist Wanted for a Community Newspaper (Tabloid Media, South Africa)
  2. Call for Entries: The COMESA Media/ Print Journalism Awards 2011 (Eastern/ Southern Africa)
  3. Job Opening: News Editor for Mail & Guardian Online (South Africa)
  4. Job Opening: Network/ News Editor for Internews (Sudan)
  5. Open to Women Journalists Worldwide: Elizabeth Neuffer Fellowship