This group is the home site for the Student Editor of the Month. The first Editor is Carol-Anne Croker
Keep posted for discussion items and issues for debate: support your local editor!
From Carol-Anne:
The first important issue deals with proposed changes to Copyright law which will impact on Australian Writers and the local publishing industry generally. I would urge you all to source either an electronic or hard copy of the Age newspaper from January 29th, 2009. p.17. (It is probably also in the Sydney Morning Herald for the same date).
Welcome to a new academic year. I am the student editor for the month and have decided to open proceedings with some news updates and a "BLOGITORIAL".
Peter Carey has written an opinion piece outlining how by
eliminating territorial copyright (Oceania for example) our writers and
industry will be decimated. The article is headlined "Silencing
Australia" and is accompanied by a Spooner Editorial cartoon. It is
worth reading and makin up your own mind on this issue.
Also on Saturday 31/1/09, the Age's Literary Editor Jason Steiger
mounts a 'call to arms' on this issue. Page 3 on the A2 Insight
section, headlined "A tparallel world filled with fear and loathing".
He asks writers and publishers to make submissions to the Productivity
Commission before the draft report is released in May. www.pc.gov.au.
This is a pressing issue for those of us reliant on Australian imprints
and distribution, so again I urge you to source an electronic or hard
copy of this article.
Then on the same day, in the same section is a Legal notice reminding
Australian authors who believe their work has been made available
electronically by Google prior to January 5, 2009, without permission
to opt in or out of the class action settlement by contacting the
Google Book Search Settlement Administrator in Minneapolis. This is a
complex and detailed piece of legal action, so for more information
visit: http://www.googlebooksettlement.com. The settlement is due to be
heard at a fairness hearing in the US on June 11, 2009, so if your work
has been disseminated this way, it is important that you seek legal
advice.
Well that's all for this week.
Join me in my first 'Blogitorial'.... Continue the discussion in this Group. Read more Student Editor blogs from BLOGS hyperlink (rhm). I have also blogged today on being moody and grumpy about Oz Lit. See New Blogs on rh menu bar.
Oh dear. Once again we are no good artists draining the country of precious resources that could go to the Sciences or Business, or to mentoring the future in Australian Cricket. It took me 10 years, two months and eleven days to become a good writer, and no doubt, if I am not plunged into despair by the lack of respect, good will and general appreciation for the art in Australia, i might spend the next few decades trying to add a very to that description.
At Varuna, no one can hear you write..... well I hope so anyway. I'm off to that writing Valhalla next week, the literary equivalent of the Australian Institute of Sport, I just hope they don't make me eat Uncle Toby's Muesli...to say I am looking forward to it is an understatement, for years I have opened the front of Australian books to find the words "Thanks also to Varuna, the Writer's House, for my time there." I feel a little like I imagine Charlie did when he unwrapped that Wonka Bar to find the Golden Ticket.
I've just invested in an old fashioned journal - one of those Bruce Chatwin moleskines no self-respecting scribbler can bear to be without - and I began to write in it today - the blog seems to demand random thoughts, the occasional joke, the half thought out, casual argument - it is the stand up medium - while the journal still has weight and depth and physical presence - it has been the medium of great writers, delusional writers, anonymous writers, persecuted writers - I'm returning to using one after a long absence - do others still use a physical journal?
My name is Yvette Walker and I am the Student Editor for February 2010. For those I did not meet at the AAWP Conference in Hamilton, I am a post-grad student at Curtin University in Western Australia entering my third year (how did that happen?) of a Doctorate of Creative Arts. I am writing a historical epistolary narrative which examines the twentieth century through the prism of three romantic relationships, three discrete sets of love letters. The ethics of representation are central to my work as four of my characters experience internment in labour or concentration camps.
Junot Diaz on becoming a writer
http://www.oprah.com/article/omagazine/200911-omag-junot-diaz-writing
Donald Barthelme's syllabus for a literary education
http://www.believermag.com/issues/200310/?read=barthelme_syllabus
How to write a great novel
Explore the Leadership Role in the Implementation of Advanced Performance Management System in The Public Sectors
Thesis is basically one of the essential requirements for one to graduate. Theses do have several parts that need proper attention and consideration so as to come up with an excellent paper.
One of the most critical parts in a thesis or a dissertation is the thesis statement. A thesis statement is a sentence that tells what the paper is all about.
Hi Carol,
Don't feel lonely on this site - even if people aren't posting I'm sure they're reading as usually several 'guests' are around. Besides, there has been much more interaction lately than previously. Also, as you say, maybe we're all being exceptionally good with our time management.
I found a really bracing set of guidelines addressing time management for writers. I think its worth reading, even though I usually cringe when managerial fads are deployed beyond their natural scope.
The full doc is at