So, at
the request of our fellow Student PEN Centres & English PEN, and out of a
need to document the fast trajectory we’ve all been on as a newly-formed
student-led subgroup of
English PEN, we at UEL PEN thought we’d
take you all on a journey – one of inception till present day. Enjoy the ride…
Inception
& Creation:
Created
in May 2013 and launched in September, the
University of East London English
PEN Society has already
proven to be full of promising social events. It was created by those of us on
the Creative & Professional Writing (BA) Hons degree course who wished to
inform students and tutors alike of the issues regarding freedom of speech and
freedom to write worldwide. Because of our chosen field of study, the freedom
to write and being able to express ourselves is a topic that is very important
to us.
We
started the society by
running
a fundraiser on Crowdfunder
from June till August 2013, where we read 60 books between four of us in just 8
weeks - helped out by honorary member, Rachael Spencer from our course. We created a separate
blog specifically to log the reviews we
wrote in order to prove we’d read the listed books, and we successfully managed
to raise our set target of £250. We also held a stall at our Fresher’s Fair in
September, offering all sorts of different interactive activities; students
could share their opinions on what “Freedom of Speech” meant to them, on
cut-out speech bubbles (the idea for which we totally borrowed from
Surrey
PEN – thanks guys!) which we
then took photos of and shared/tweeted. Students were also able to give a
suggested donation of £2 and choose among our ‘lucky dip’ books, where we’d wrapped
up the books and written a small summary on the wrapping – this was in order to
redirect the focus to the stories instead of the authors ‘name,’ as well as
offering an element of surprise and mystery to their purchase and support.
Emerald at our Fresher’s Week stall.
Events:
The money
we raised from our fundraiser was used in part for our first event; our
Launch
Party in October. The
remainder of the money, plus all profits earned that evening and for all events
we have held and will hold thereafter, go directly to English PEN at the end of
the academic year. We welcomed guest speaker Julia Ziemer from English PEN, who
shared more information about what PEN do and how to get involved, and our
feature act was Tim Atkins, our course tutor and accomplished poet, who
performed a piece he’d written and had published in the English PEN anthology
Catechism: Poems for Pussy Riot.
We also showed short films on the subject of free speech, supplied refreshments
and snacks, and held a raffle at the end of the evening. We were supported by
English PEN, UEL’s Vice-Chancellor John Joughin, University of East London’s
Student Union, and Pete Ayrton of Serpent’s Tail, who very generously donated a
huge pile of books for our book raffle. UEL students were invited to read out
their pieces on the subject of freedom of speech in our open mic section, and
Mel Dok’s story on the riots in Turkey made such an impact on English PEN that they
featured it
on their website.
At this event, largely due to the amazing marketing skills of Freyja, an
honorary member who we said goodbye to at the end of last year when she moved
to San Francisco, we welcomed almost 40 people.
Tim Atkins reading out his Pussy Riot piece
at our launch event.
In
November we held an awareness raising
event for Pussy Riot,
in light of the imprisonment of two of their main members, their appalling
treatment in prison, and Nadia
Tolokonnikova’s subsequent disappearance whilst
in transit to a Siberian prison colony. We also welcomed new member into the
fold; open mic organiser and events whizz Jack Pascoe. In this, we had another
open mic section, and held a candlelit Empty Chair section where we read out
some of Maria
Alyokhina’s work (the other incarcerated
member), in order to release her words into the world in her absence and in
defiance of the censorship imposed on her. We also welcomed Grace Hetherington
of English PEN, and we had approximately 20 attendees. We preceded the evening
with a Letter Writing afternoon in which we invited students to come and write
letters to the imprisoned band members, expressing their support for them.
Sam reading out Maria
Alyokhina's work in the Empty Chair section at our November event.
After a
restful and mince-pie filled Christmas break, the UEL English PEN Society has
another event in the pipeline for February 20
th,
2014 – an open mic and poetry performance evening in recognition of LGBT
History Month, and in collaboration with the UEL LGBT Society. We’ll be raising
awareness of the
current
situation in Russia, as well as people throughout history who have been imprisoned or murdered as a result of their pro-gay activism or writing. We're also very excited to be welcoming Feature Act Michelle Madsen, founder of the London branch of Hammer and Tongue, the UK's largest slam poetry network; and Guest Speaker Russell Sax, who is a current student on our writing MA: Imaginative Practice, reading pieces from his newly released book
A Gay Man Walks Through Soho.
In March, we’ll be
focusing on land rights for indigenous people and translation work – event page
coming soon – please ‘like’ our
Facebook page for invites and updates on this.
A Russian gay rights activist at a protest rally,
in a police van. Sign says: “Love Beats Homophobia”
Other
Developments:
We are
very lucky to have been offered the chance to field out several volunteer roles
within our society as one of the projects offered on our Level 2 work
experience module. Helena Blakemore, course leader for the Creative &
Professional Writing degree, has always been hugely supportive of what we do at
UEL PEN, and we’re very thankful for this very exciting opportunity. We will be
offering roles such as graphic design, marketing, events organisation and
admin, on an academically marked module; hopefully helping to create work
experience for University of East London students within our society and degree
course. This is also fantastic chance to find and/or choose suitable candidates
to hand the society over to in May, when Sam (President) and Mandy (Social
Networking Queen), will both be graduating. We will miss the society very much!
We’re
also attending several external workshops and events as a society that are
relevant to human rights and freedom of expression; not just to meet and talk
to new people, but being writers, to increase our own personal skills in
writing for freedom. The last one we went to was run at IdeasTap HQ in Borough
on Thursday 23
rd January
and attended by Sam and Emerald; the
Keats House Blackout Poetry workshop, taught by
Laila Sumpton and Stephanie Turner. It was fascinating to use a new form of
poetry writing technique that we hadn’t attempted before, and we were asked to
respond to artworks created for the organisation on a separate IdeasTap brief,
based on the theme of freedom of speech. The work produced by everyone in this
workshop was stunning, and we were very pleased we’d had the opportunity to
attend.
On
February 17th, we are attending
She
Grrrowls once more;
this time to read out some of our own work on the theme of women’s rights and
Anti-Valentines. Watch this space for updates, and catch the UEL PEN
Twitter for random musings on just about everything free-speech
related.
In the
meantime, we are currently up to a staggering 70 members and supporters, but
are always looking for more. If you’d like to get
involved, and/or think you can help with any of the above-mentioned roles, please
get in touch with a little bit about yourself; where your passions lie, what
you think you’d like to do for us, or even just to say hello, on: uelenglishpen@gmail.com – we look forward to hearing from you.
Hope to
see you at our
next event! Till
then, with love and hope.
UEL
English PEN Society
---
Co-authored
by Sam Dodd & Mandy Lutman.