Episodes

  • An Interview with Ekiyokere Ekiye
    Oct 16 2023

    PhD student Shailini Vinod talks with linguistics PhD research student Ekiyokere Ekiye about her studies in literature and linguistics and her various roles as a lecturer and communications instructor in Nigeria and Scotland.

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    40 mins
  • An Interview with Shane Strachan
    Sep 6 2023

    PhD students Ian Grosz and Shailini Vinod talk with Scots Scriever and newly appointed lecturer at the School of Language, Literature, Music and Visual Culture Dr Shane Strachan about his journey from PhD to his appointment as lecturer, about his use of Doric and Scots as a creative platform, and about his role as current Scots Scriever. Shane also reads his poem Doric Dwams, discussing the inspiration for it and his collaboration with composer Emily de Simone and cellist Aileen Sweeney.

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    45 mins
  • Art and Science at the George Washington Wilson Centre
    Jun 8 2023

    PhD students Ian Grosz and Shailini Vinod talk with the directors of the George Washington Wilson Centre for Art and Visual Culture, Drs Silvia Cassini and Hans Hones, about how they are bringing the arts and sciences together through the activities of the centre.

    The George Washington Wilson Centre brings together researchers from a wide range of disciplines. Its members share a common concern in investigating art and visual culture: what it is; how it functions across different times, places and contexts; how we encounter or understand it. The Centre facilitates a range of activities fostering collaborative research into art and visual culture, including a regular seminar series; an interdisciplinary reading group; international conferences; and public engagement events.

    The Centre takes its name from George Washington Wilson, the renowned Aberdeen-based Victorian photographer. The entire collection of George Washington Wilson’s photographic plates is held by the University Library.

    See https://www.abdn.ac.uk/sdhp/gww-centre-2169.php

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    32 mins
  • Fields of Meaning – An Interview with Eden Unger Bowditch
    Apr 4 2023

    Third Year PhD researcher Eden Unger Bowditch reads from her novel in progress Two-Hundred-and-Fifty Years at Home, and discusses the nature of ambiguity in the literary text.

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    33 mins
  • Brian Keeley – Visual artist and heart transplant recipient
    Nov 18 2022

    Brian Keeley is a final year PhD student within the Dept. of Film & Visual Culture of the University of Aberdeen. His research focusses on portrayals of heart transplantation in contemporary art and visual culture. Brian’s thesis is practice-based and draws upon his own experience as a visual artist and filmmaker, and as a heart transplant recipient. Despite being a standard procedure to treat end-stage heart failure for more than half a century, heart transplantation has a cultural legacy which pre-dates modern medical science, and is therefore based on superstition and fascination. This is still reflected in films, for example, which typically depict narratives around heart transplantation in fantastical ways - through science-fiction, horror, or bio-sentimentality. Storylines focus on supernatural or implausible donor-recipient relationships, and research suggests that such portrayals are harmful to public attitudes to organ donation and transplantation. Contemporary visual art - and related academic research – is often concerned with conceptual notions of identity and altered corporeality. High-profile art exhibitions themed around heart transplantation are almost exclusively presented from non-experiential perspectives, excluding voices of those with the lived experience. The result is a denial of the reality of what is a chronic, and life-changing medical condition, in favour of speculative or metaphorical concepts. Brian Keeley’s research argues that persistent cultural misrepresentations and stereotypes of heart transplantation would be deemed inappropriate were they applied to people with other forms of corporeal difference, disabilities, or marginalised vulnerabilities. Link: Brian Keeley – The making of his 2016 artwork RENAISSANCE: https://briankeeley.wordpress.com/renaissance/

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    42 mins
  • The Work of the Walter Scott Research Centre
    Oct 27 2022

    Summary

    This podcast explores the work that is being undertaken to produce a ten volume edition of Walter Scott’s Poetry at Aberdeen. Alison Lumsden, the Principal Investigator for the AHRC funded project The Edinburgh Edition of Walter Scott’s Poetry: Engaging New Audiences, explains what is involved in creating such an edition and with research fellows Natalie Tal Harries and Anna Fancett discuss why it is needed and their personal interests in Scott. As ECRs Natalie and Anna share their own journeys from PhD to their current posts, and explain what their day to day work with the Walter Scott Research Centre involves.

    Bio Sir Walter Scott Research Centre

    The Walter Scott Research Centre was established in 1991. It exists to conduct and to promote research into Scott and his works, the intellectual world in which he grew up and on which he drew, the contexts in which he worked, and the ways in which his work was used by other writers, other arts, business and politics, particularly in the nineteenth century. Its interests are interdisciplinary and its scope is international. The Centre is primarily engaged in project research, but also supports the research activity of its individual members and facilitates the study of Scott at undergraduate and postgraduate levels. The Centre is now engaged in editing a 10-volume edition of Scott’s Poetry under the leadership of Professor Alison Lumsden. Two volumes in the Edinburgh Edition of Walter Scott’s Poetry have been published: Marmion, edited by Ainsley McIntosh (2018) and The Shorter Poems, edited by Gillian Hughes and P. D. Garside. Poetry from the Waverley Novels and Other Writings, edited by David Hewitt, and The Lady of the Lake, edited by Alison Lumsden are now well underway.

    Ali Lumsden

    Ali Lumsden is Regius Professor of English Literature at the University of Aberdeen and Director of the Walter Scott Research Centre. The Centre aims to promote all aspects of Walter Scott’s work and the intellectual contexts for it and to explore his relevance for modern readers. It works closely with Abbotsford, Scott’s home in the Scottish Borders. Ali is also Principal Investigator for the AHRC funded project The Edinburgh Edition of Walter Scott’s Poetry: Engaging New Audiences.

    Anna Fancett

    Anna Fancett is a Research Assistant at the Walter Scott Research Centre. Building on her doctoral research on the significance of familial representation in the novels of Walter Scott and Jane Austen, Anna has published articles in the Scottish Literary Review and the Wenshan Review, as well book chapters, blogs, and teaching resources. In 2020, she was the winner of the Jack Medal, which is awarded annually for the best article on a subject related to Reception or Diaspora in Scottish Literatures. She is currently working on a Walter Scott companion for McFarland’s nineteenth-century series.

    Natalie Tal Harries

    Natalie Tal Harries is a Research Fellow at the Walter Scott Research Centre, University of Aberdeen, working on the AHRC funded Edinburgh Edition of Walter Scott’s Poetry project. She is also an ECR Fellow at the Institute of English Studies (University of London) where she has been working on the late Indian influences of P.B. Shelley. Natalie’s research interests are primarily focused on Romantic poetry, and she is particularly interested in the ways in which the varied and often ‘esoteric’ reading and interests of Romantic writers informed metaphysical exploration, transcendental experience and visionary expression in their poetry.

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    51 mins
  • Life Writing with Jane Hughes
    Sep 22 2022

    Summary

    Co-hosts Ian Grosz and Shailini Vinod talk to Jane Hughes about her work on contemporary life writing and memoir. All three are PhD students in creative writing at the University of Aberdeen.

    Inspired by her past career as a civil funeral celebrant, Jane was already writing an experimental memoir incorporating elements of fiction and irreverent humour when her mother died, suddenly and unexpectedly, in 2019. Overtaken by events which were not funny at all, Jane continued to write the memoir, incorporating raw details of her personal bereavement experience and collaging a variety of forms of written work into an unusual PhD project that reflects the complexity of grief and the fact that life events can be surprising…

    The episode considers the difficulties inherent in writing about personal grief. Jane speaks about her creative process and about using writing to make sense of immediate traumatic events. She also reflects on her use of creative writing as a therapeutic tool, both personally and in her work as a psychotherapist. The episode includes a reading of an excerpt from the memoir, which is a work in progress.

    Bio

    Jane Hughes is a studying part-time for a PhD in creative writing with the University of Aberdeen. Jane has an MA in Scriptwriting for TV and Radio from the University of Salford and works in Manchester as a psychotherapist. Her essay, ‘Three Wheels on my Wagon’, appears in Essays in Life Writing, published by Routledge in 2022. Recent essays on attachment to place can be found online, published by Elsewhere: A Journal of Place and The Clearing, the online journal created by Little Toller books. Links to her recent published work are available at www.jane-hughes.net

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    37 mins
  • WayWORD Festival in 2022
    Aug 25 2022

    Dr. Helen Lynch teaches Early Modern Literature & Creative Writing at University of Aberdeen. She has written two short story collections: The Elephant & the Polish Question (2009) and Tea for the Rent Boy (2018) as well as academic work on seventeenth century literature, gender and politics, including Milton & the Politics of Public Speech (2015). She has also written interactive online resources for school children, Beowulf for Beginners and The Knight with the Lion, and been Creative Director of WayWORD Festival since 2020. She also plays in ceilidh band Danse McCabre www.dansemccabre.com

    Bea Livesey-Stephens is a recent graduate of the MA(Hons) Language and Linguistics programme at the University of Aberdeen where she was one of the co-founders of the WayWORD Festival. She is currently the WORD Centre intern, taking on, in addition, the Equality, Diversity and Inclusion role for the WayWORD Festival in 2022. She will be hosting a Gaming Panel at this year’s festival.

    The WORD Centre for Creative Writing brings together writers, performers, artists, scholars and audiences of North-East Scotland through creative projects, collaborations, events and performances.

    From fiction and poetry, to creative non-fiction and collaborative mixed media, the projects of the Centre speak all the languages of North-East Scotland, from Doric and English, to Gaelic and Polish, engaging with its histories and cultural traditions. Reaching out beyond the university community to wider, diverse audiences, the projects of the Centre seek to connect and nurture North-East arts and artists, drawing a creative map of the region.

    Founded in 2020 as part of University of Aberdeen's 525th anniversary celebrations, WayWORD is a student and youth-[ed, literary cross-arts festival for people of all ages, Consisting of workshops, panel discussions, exhibitions, author events and performance nights, the festival takes place annually over 5 days at the end of September. Tickets are FREE and the festival has BSL interpretation and captioning throughout.

    Besides established creatives and new talent, the festival focusses on more unconventional forms of artistic expression: from comics, fan fiction, queer horror, song-writing, narrative gaming, to visual art, poetry, dance or spoken word performance: there should be something here for everyone.

    www.waywordfestival.com

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    40 mins