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- Emma Claire Sweeney on The Ins and Outs of Archival Research
- Emma Claire Sweeney on ‘I shall shift my trumpet and take up my knitting’: Disability, Sex, and Self-Assertion in the Autobiography of Harriet Martineau
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- Emma Claire Sweeney on ‘I shall shift my trumpet and take up my knitting’: Disability, Sex, and Self-Assertion in the Autobiography of Harriet Martineau
- Clare Walker Gore on ‘I shall shift my trumpet and take up my knitting’: Disability, Sex, and Self-Assertion in the Autobiography of Harriet Martineau
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Tag Archives: Lania Knight
A Fine Balance: writing, teaching, public engagement
When the world opened again after lockdown, my steadfast companion was the view out my home office window of a fell in Cumbria. Fell ponies often arranged themselves along the ridge of the commons above grazing sheep, backlit by low … Continue reading
Posted in Research
Tagged A363, A363: Advanced Creative Writing, Common People, creative writing, Dorothy Wordsworth, Emma Claire Sweeney, fourth genre, Kit de Waal, Lania Knight, Milton Keynes Literary Festival, MKLitFest, My Name Is Leon, Open University, Samuel Taylor Coleridge, Signal 8 Press, sublime, There is Fire Here, William Wordsworth, Without Warning and Only Sometimes, Zoe Lambert
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Judging Milton Keynes LitFest’s Poetry Competition
In recent months, several members of our Creative Writing team have been collaborating with our local bookish friends at Milton Keynes Literary Festival. On Saturday 15th April, lecturer Lania Knight interviewed fellow novelist and life writer Kit de Waal about … Continue reading
Posted in Collaborations, Creative Writing, News, Public engagement, Research
Tagged Bridport Prize, Centre for New Writing at University of Manchester, creative writing, Daffodils, ekphrasis, Exit Strategy: Ekphrasis through the lens of the abstract and the formless, Eyewear, Full Sight of Her, Jane Yeh, John Pollard Prize, Kit de Waal, Lania Knight, Milton Keynes Literary Festival, MinK2023, MKLitFest, Night Mail, Norman Nicholson, PhD in creative writing, Siobhan Campbell, Sylvia Plath, W.H. Auden, William Wordsworth, Windscale
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