Researchers and Writers at Lancaster debate the Shrinking Globe 

 02 Sep 2009 

 

Hundreds of writers and researchers from across the world are heading to the North West this month (9-12th September) to share the results of a four year project, funded by the Arts and Humanities Research Council (AHRC), investigating the impact of migration on creative writing in Manchester.

Changes in transportation, technology and the world economy mean we now live in a shrinking world. A conference held at Lancaster University - Glocal Imaginaries: Writing/Migration/Place – will explore how this has impacted upon our sense of ‘home’ in the 21st Century.

The conference is one of a raft of events celebrating the end of the research project, ‘Moving Manchester /Mediating Marginalites’ based at Lancaster University, which set out to promote and research the city’s wealth of multicultural writing from the 60s to the present. Delegates from thirty-five countries around the world are expected to attend the event.

Project director Professor Lynne Pearce of Lancaster University, said: “In many ways Manchester is the definitive migrant city. Since the industrial revolution, the city has been populated with migrants drawn from other parts of the UK and beyond. And the increasingly complex relationship between the local and the global has emerged as one of the defining characteristics of contemporary Manchester writing.

“This project has explored how those experiences have shaped the creative voice of the city for several generations. Now, for the first time, we have captured some of those voices in an electronic catalogue creating a resource for writers, researchers and the public for years to come.

“Listening to the voices of those who have moved between such different cultures on a regular basis over several decades can help us better understand the complex nature of migration in the modern world and how most of us are now migrants of some kind."

 

ENDS

Media Contact: Jake Gilmore, Communications Manager, j.gilmore@ahrc.ac.uk. Tel: 0117 9876 773

Notes to the Editor

‘Moving Manchester’ The AHRC-funded project ‘Moving Manchester’ is based at Lancaster University, where the team comprises Prof Lynne Pearce (English), Dr Robert Crawshaw (European Languages and Cultures), Dr Graham Mort (Creative Writing), Dr Corinne Fowler (project researcher) and Mrs Jo McVicker (project administrator).

The programme of events lined up to celebrate the end of the ‘Moving Manchester’ includes:

• A three-day international conference, ‘Glocal Imaginaries: Writing/Migration/Place’ at Lancaster University attended by around 200 delegates from Africa, South America, Asia, Australia and Europe. 9-11 September 2009.

• An evening performance at Lancaster University (11th Sept).which will include the launch of an anthology of new Manchester writing called ‘Migration Stories’. This book is published by ‘Commonword’ – an organisation that has been developing and promoting writing in the city since the early 1980s.  Six authors will read from their stories and there will also be a performance by well-known Manchester poet, Shamshad Khan, Venue: The Great Hall, Lancaster University Campus. Tickets available on the door.

• A creative arts day on Saturday, September 12 at the Whitworth Gallery, Manchester. This event will feature readings, talks and performances by well-known writers and artists as well as an exhibition of the work of artists, photographers, writing groups and community arts organisations involved with issues of migration.

• An evening performance at the Whitworth Gallery on Saturday 12 September headlined by Jackie Kay. This  will also include the premiere of the Moving Manchester conference commission, won by John Siddique. Music will be provided by the Congolese band Les Elus. Both of Saturday's events will be open to the general public and tickets will be available on the door.

• Newly commissioned work: A sequence of new poems by John Siddique: ‘From a Seed to a Flower: five poems from real lives.’  Based on interviews with migrants in and around Manchester’s Piccadilly, the poems are accompanied by his own photographic images of his subjects;  also, an Anthology of new Manchester writing, Migration Stories (Commonword Publishers), to be launched at Lancaster on Friday 11th September along with the performance of a new poem by Shamshad Khan.

• An exhibition of Manchester writers showcasing  fifty years of writing in Greater Manchester, 7 September - 17 October 2009 Manchester Central Library.  See www.lancaster.ac.uk/fass/projects/movingmanchester/ and follow the links to Exhibitions for further details.

• The launch of an online Writers' Gallery featuring the work of selected Manchester writers from Maya Chowdhry and SuAndi  to  John Lyons and Pete Kalu.

• The launch of a  digital catalogue of over 200 Manchester migrant writers presently available on the ‘Moving Manchester’ website which will eventually be linked to the Manchester Central Library Catalogue.

 

About Arts and Humanities Research Council ‐ Each year the AHRC provides approximately £102 million from the Government to support research and postgraduate study in the arts and humanities, from languages and law, archaeology and English literature to design and creative and performing arts. In any one year, the AHRC makes approximately 700 research awards and around 1,350 postgraduate awards. Awards are made after a rigorous peer review process, to ensure that only applications of the highest quality are funded. Arts and humanities researchers constitute over a quarter of all research‐active staff in the higher education sector. The quality and range of research supported by this investment of public funds not only provides social and cultural benefits but also contributes to the economic success of the UK.