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Academic Academic Events Conventions Events Readings Workshop

Glasgow Science Festival, Satellite 6, GIFCon Highlights – and Exciting News…

GIFCon is nearly over and done with for another year, so time for a wee update on upcoming things:

Firstly, Oliver Langmead and I will be giving a version of our workshop, ‘Discover New Worlds Through Creative Writing’ on 13th June at the Glasgow Science Festival. If you missed our Edinburgh International Science Festival and GIFCon events, this will be your last chance to catch our workshops for a wee while. So, get yourself registered for free tickets at the link below, and we’ll see you there! We kick off at 5:30pm on 13th June at 5 University Gardens, University of Glasgow.

https://www.gla.ac.uk/events/sciencefestival/glasgowsciencefestival2018/adult/headline_325536_en.html

Before that, I’ll be appearing at the Satellite 6 convention in Glasgow at the end of May. Until the programme is officially announced (and I’ll post more then), here’s where you can register for this year’s event.

https://six.satellitex.org.uk/

As for 2019, I’ve been invited onto the Programming Committee for next year’s Eastercon, Ytterbium. With the delightful Frances Hardinge, John Scalzi, Sydney Padua, and DC as guests of honour, I’m really looking forward to working with Farah Mendlesohn and the team on next year’s event!

Finally, some fiction news. Towards the end of last year, I put in an application to do a creative doctorate, and I’m happy to say the department accepted me. So, this coming Autumn, I’ll be starting on the DFA in Creative Writing programme at the University of Glasgow. I’ll be working with Zoe Strachan, Dr Rob Maslen, and Dr Matt Barr on a long-form project about patriarchal theory, video-gaming, and Hamlet. I’ll be hoping to keep my hand in Fantastic academia and aiming to get a couple of papers published during the course. For now, I’m really looking forward to getting stuck into a larger fiction project and tackling some ideas that have been on my mind since my time as a raider a decade ago.

In the meantime, this Summer will be devoted to finishing my dissertation for the MLitt in Fantasy in Glasgow, moving house, and maybe finishing the odd short story. Best get back to that, then…!

Well, okay, before I go, here’s a few of my highlights from GIFCon, as captured on camera and reported by twitter (with huge thanks to Gabe Cohen, Taylor Driggers, Marita Arvaniti, Emma McMullan, and the wonderful Tex Thompson):

https://twitter.com/FemaleGabe/status/989781325128306688

https://twitter.com/FemaleGabe/status/989782794258845696

https://twitter.com/TaylorWDriggers/status/989803353029926912

https://twitter.com/TaylorWDriggers/status/989803974646816768

https://twitter.com/TaylorWDriggers/status/989804351148392448

https://twitter.com/TaylorWDriggers/status/989804839071870976

https://twitter.com/TaylorWDriggers/status/989805370641211392

https://twitter.com/FemaleGabe/status/989805760040366080

https://twitter.com/TaylorWDriggers/status/989806121308377088

https://twitter.com/TaylorWDriggers/status/989806471226580993

https://twitter.com/TaylorWDriggers/status/989806829193572354

https://twitter.com/FemaleGabe/status/989806978116603904

https://twitter.com/TaylorWDriggers/status/989807432183484416

https://twitter.com/TaylorWDriggers/status/989807894307713024

https://twitter.com/FemaleGabe/status/989807910749384704

https://twitter.com/FemaleGabe/status/989809702652477440

https://twitter.com/TaylorWDriggers/status/989810166693588993

https://twitter.com/TaylorWDriggers/status/989819828469993472

 

Categories
Academic Academic Events Workshop

GIFCon 2018 schedule

Next Thursday 26th and Friday 27th April, we’ll be running our second annual Glasgow International Fantasy Conversations event, GIFCon 2018. Keynote speakers include acclaimed celtic studies and children’s literature scholar Dr Dimitra Fimi, author of the Children of the Damned series, Arianne “Tex” Thompson, SF and metafictions scholar Dr Will Slocombe, and Victorian Studies Professor Dr Alice Jenkins — plus we have creative writing workshops, and more than 50 papers across two days. It’s been a lot of hard work for the committee over the last few months, but we’re really looking forward to bringing this wonderful programme to you!

Aside from running about getting content for our social media updates, I’ll also be giving a paper and running a creative writing workshop.

Here’s where you can find me at GIFCon 2018:

Thursday 26 April 2018

4:45pm – 6:00pm (University Gardens 5, room 101)
Panel 8: There Be Dragons: Maps, Architecture, and Worldbuilding in Fantasy Siddharth Pandey, Christopher Lynch Becherer, Lena Abraham, Ruth Booth (chair)

I’ll be chairing what promises to be a fascinating discussion about secondary worlds and the notion of creation and the constructed realities of space and map-making.

Friday 27 April 2018

8:30am – 10:00am (University Gardens 4, room 202)
Workshop 1: Discovering New Worlds Through WritingOliver Langmead and Ruth EJ Booth

If you missed our workshop at Edinburgh International Science Festival, Oliver Langmead and I will be presenting a special Fantasy version at this year’s GIFCon. Bring pens, paper, and a good whack of imagination, as we explore worlds beyond the portal.

10:15am – 11:30am (University Gardens 5, room 101)
Panel 11: Escape in Japan Hannah Greenblott, Miguel Cesar, Ruth Booth Monica Vazquez (chair)
[…]
3) Ruth Booth: Growing-up in the Time of No-Face: Escapism, Illusion, and Identity in Spirited Away.

In this paper, I’ll be examining how Spirited Away confounds the division between fantasy and reality in children’s narratives through its use of magic, identity, and the consequences of actions. Join me for an exploration of escapism in one of my favourite Studio Ghibli films!

For details of the rest of the programme, head to https://gifcon.org/programme-2018/.

GIFCon 2018 is now sold out, but you can join the waiting list by clicking here.

Categories
Academic Events Awards Book Launch Conventions Edinburgh International Book Festival Edinburgh International Book Festival End Of Year Events Fiction From Glasgow to Saturn Shoreline of Infinity worldcon Worldcon 75

2017 in Review

There’s only hours left until the end of the year, so since it’s the season here’s a look back on my year in genre.

This year’s been rather quiet in terms of new stories. THE ANNIVERSARY was my first sale to Black Static, and appeared swiftly afterwards in Issue 61, which was a delightful surprise for the end of the year. Also, turns out flash fiction is eligible for all the awards, as far as I can work out, so if you read it and think it’s worth a nomination, please do so.

In reprints, GOOD BOY also made its first appearance in audio format on Pseudopod‘s Flash on the Borderlands XXXVIII: Letting Go episode. THE HONEY TRAP was also reprinted for the first time in the Edinburgh International Book Festival Special Issue of Shoreline of Infinity 8 1/2. I also made my first translation sale in Chinese of this story, which should be appearing in the new year. More on that soon, I hope.

I’m still writing the Noise and Sparks column for SF journal Shoreline of Infinity, which is also eligible for Non-fiction awards, if you reckon it’s worth a nomination. ‘The Legend of the Kick-Arse Wise Women’ (Issue 8), about the relationship between age, experience, and imposter syndrome, seemed to resonate with a lot of folks, so thank you for your kind responses. My favourite is still ‘The Company of Bears’, from the current issue (10), but party because this year I fell in love with the fact that there are real cosplay Faerie Markets over in the US, a discovery I made with the paper given by Georgia Natishan at this year’s GIFCon – and, in a way, isn’t that what all cons kind of are?

Most of my New Things this year have been in non-fiction. I helped organize my first symposium, in 2017’s inaugural GIFCon event, with keynote speakers Julie Bertagna, Phil Harris, Stefan Ekman, Robert Maslen, and Maureen Farrell. I also presented my first paper there, on Neil Gaiman’s American Gods and superhero modes of adaptation and revision, and I gave my first academic poster at Worldcon 75 in Helsinki, on Taoist Landscape and Ursula K. Le Guin’s Earthsea sequence.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Worldcon was my only con of 2017, but it was grand to get another chance to attend one of these in Europe. Once again, I appeared on panels, this time on Neil Gaiman’s ‘The Sandman’, and ‘From Literature to Movies and Television – Adaptation of Scifi and Fantasy’ – a pair of great discussions that not only gave us the chance for a bit of role-play, but a chance to catch up with old friends and new (and nerd out in front of Margaret Dunlap, who is currently working on the new Dark Crystal TV series – eeee!).

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Around that time, I was also sitting on the jury for the British Fantasy Society’s Non-fiction Award, my second year out – and a tricky job this time, as anyone else in on the final decision will attest, but thrilling to find these conversations around genre criticism to be so difficult, indicating as they did the high standard of the shortlisted works. I also squeezed in a couple of interviews with authors at various things – Oliver Langmead‘s Glasgow launch for Metronome at Waterstones Argyle Street, and a chat with Laura Lam about Shattered Minds at October’s Event Horizon.

 

 

 

 

The last quarter of the year also bought some firsts: I was the lead for the Creative Writing Station at Night at the Museum: Fantasy Scotland event at the Hunterian Museum in Scotland, in partnership with the MLitt in Fantasy at the University of Glasgow. As the rest of the team will agree, this was an amazing night, and we were thrilled to see people at the event and online responding to our challenges so imaginatively. Huge thanks to my fellow station folks Oliver Langmead, Sarah Tytler, Angie Spoto, Mary-Kate Wagamon and Luc Bateman for their brilliant work!

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

I also became an editor for From Glasgow to Saturn, the arts and creative writing journal at the University of Glasgow. We recently sent out the acceptances for our 40th issue of the journal and, come the new year, we start working on readying these submissions for publication in early Spring. I can’t wait to share these wonderful tales with you!

There were also a few personal writing highlights: getting to see Nalo Hopkinson, Malika Booker, Alasdair Gray, and Christopher Priest read in person – and sharing a TOC with Nalo as part of Shoreline of Infinity 8 1/2. I also got to meet Samuel R. Delany, which was not only a delight because of how utterly charming and insightful he is, but because his biographical documentary ‘The Polymath’ helped me work through some personal issues earlier in the year. I also gave cosplay a try for the first time this year, going to Worldcon as The Corinthian from Neil Gaiman‘s The Sandman comics, and Night at the Musem as Lottie from Neil Williamson‘s The Moon King. And I had the joy of watching my coursemates graduate from the University of Glasgow, and another friend win her first Hugo Award. So that’s a good year, isn’t it?

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

2018 will not only see my first issue of From Glasgow to Saturn as Editor, but also the second outing of GIFCon, for which I’m handling the social media presence (give me a wave sometime on twitter, facebook or instagram). I’ll be giving at least one workshop in the first half of the year in Edinburgh, as well as a brand new reading in Glasgow. Right now, I should be working on my column for the next issue of Shoreline of Infinity, a special issue for International Women’s Day. I’ll be entering the final stretch of my Masters degree in Fantasy next year.

As for what I’ll be doing after that, well I can’t officially say right now, but I hope you’ll stick around to find out.