News, analysis and comment - publishing & writing |
MEDIA RELEASE COURTESY OF: Australian Writers’ Guild
The pool of core funding available for organisations who support and provide services to playwrights is around $300,000. None of this is being given to your Guild. It has all been allocated to one organisation, and your protest has not been heard.
We have your petition and now we want to know more about what support you think you should be getting from the Australia Council.
Nationwide rallies are being called so that members can come together, speak their minds and plan our next steps.
THE STORY SO FAR.......
In March this year 250 Guild members signed a petition to the Arts Minister to protest the decision of the Australia Council not to provide organisational support for playwrights to the AWG.
We submitted the petition to the Australia Council in the first instance, and embarked on a series of meetings seeking a logical and fair response.
We have now reached the end of the discussion process and there has been no back-down. We have no option now but to forward the petition so many of you signed to the Minister.
There is no opportunity to apply again for organisational support from either Theatre or Literature Boards until 2013 for funding in 2014.
We can apply to the Literature Board for project funding in October, which we will of course do, but that does not provide the core, reliable support that playwrights deserve for their national membership body.
There are no project funds available for AWG playwright professional development from the Theatre Board.
After years of being locked into an outdated key organisation grant of $20,000 we have now been de-funded as a key organisation, despite a huge increase in membership and programmes since we first applied for that level of funding 8 years ago.
The AWG was the only applicant who previously had core funding as a key organisation, who was not even permitted to provide a full application with a detailed programme of activities for consideration.
We have made it clear to the Australia Council that any funding from them would go directly to services for playwrights. We are well established, we do not need public funding to pay our rent or our salaries – every dollar they provide will go directly to services for members.
WHAT DO YOU WANT? WHEN DO YOU WANT IT?
Rallies will take place in major capital cities and virtual meetings will be organised for members outside these areas.
If you can help organise a playwright rally in your city please contact Brad Taylor via membership@awg.com.au
Laura James 21 May 2012
ALLEN & UNWIN: Patrick deWitt’s latest novel reclaims the western genre to tell a story of two brothers, both professional killers, bound together by blood, violence, and love.
Bernie Burke 21 May 2012
SYDNEY WRITERS’ FESTIVAL: Dr Karl Kruszelnicki may well be Australia’s most trusted boffin – so why does he claim that his popularity is receding?
John Silberberg 21 May 2012
TEXT: The latest thriller from UK author Elizabeth Haynes explores the collision of past and present, and the tensions between city and country.
Rebecca Howden 18 May 2012
TEXT: Jennifer Miller’s tender and absorbing novel, set at an elite academy in Massachusetts, is part mystery, part coming of age story, and poignantly and viscerally written.
Sarah Braybrooke 15 May 2012
ALLEN & UNWIN: Winner of this year’s The Australian/Vogel Award for an unpublished manuscript, Paul D. Carter’s first novel builds a convincing and sympathetic narrative around a teenager's love of football.
Bianca Rohlje 11 May 2012
MIEGUNYAH PRESS: Lesley Harding and Kendrah Morgan’s new book re-inserts the Heide garden into the literature surrounding this inspiring site, its creators, and the makers of its myths.
Tim Spencer 11 May 2012
TEXT PUBLISHING: The latest collection of essay, memoir and reportage is optimistic for a once lucky, now smart, country.
Bianca Rohlje 7 May 2012
PICADOR: Canadian author Kyo Maclear’s second novel explores a hidden world of betrayal, lost loves, and the search for one’s identity and place in the world.
Sarah Braybrooke 7 May 2012
TEXT: Glen Duncan’s latest novel both mocks and recycles all the usual horror tropes while crafting a compelling female voice through which to explore his thoroughly literary themes.
Ebonie Hyland 4 May 2012
TEXT: The debut novel by Melbourne author Chris Flynn is an engaging story about a Northern Irish hardman hiding from his past in southern Thailand.
Rebecca Howden 5 May 2012
With a blend of politics, economics, literature and culture interspersed with short fiction and poetry, Overland achieves a commendable balance of progressive thought and entertainment.
Roz Bellamy 5 May 2012
WAKEFIELD PRESS: Award-winning author Steven Miller's latest book is a unique history of Australian art seen through the lens of canine representation.
Clea Westenberg 28 Apr 2012
EXPRESS MEDIA: Voiceworks #88 showcases some of the best fiction, non-fiction, poetry, illustrations and graphic art by young Australians.
Oliver Mol 24 Apr 2012
TEXT: The debut novel by Melbourne-based author Romy Ash is about childhood, youth and growing up, but also about mediocrity, unfairness and the unknown.
Jake Davies 21 Apr 2012
WAKEFIELD PRESS: This acutely personal new collection of poems by Cath Kenneally is grounded in the minutiae of the everyday.
Alexis Hunter 21 Apr 2012
TRANSIT LOUNGE: Robert Power’s debut novel provides a poignant view into the mind of his young protagonist as he tries to understand the violent world in which he lives.
Sarah Braybrooke 24 Mar 2012
WAKEFIELD PRESS: Artist and writer Stephanie Radok presents a revelatory picture of interconnectedness, describing art and its influences in a way that is jargon-free and universal.
Oliver Mol 3 Mar 2012
MUP: Seminal 1950s Melbourne filmmaker Tim Burstall’s scathingly honest, self-deprecating and frank diaries have finally been published.
Sarah Braybrooke 4 Feb 2012
EXPRESS MEDIA: Brilliantly showcasing a range of young, emerging writing talent, the current issue of Voiceworks – on the theme of play – is extremely appealing.
Sarah Shaul 21 Jan 2012
TEXT PUBLISHING: A finely written, thought-provoking and satisfying novel about a young ballerina coming to terms with adolescence and her burgeoning sexuality.