A team of First Nations and People of Colour (POC) writers have started statistical research into how many First Nations and POC writers were published in Australia in 2018.
Hella Ibrahim
In highschool a classmate calls me a sand n—. It’s the first time I’ve heard the term, and I’m more confused by it than anything else.
How much farther do we need to go as an industry?
Recently, we published a piece called ‘Passport pains’. Following publication, we received feedback on it from several sources, and we’d like to take this opportunity to…
We’re not going to let you win.
This piece was written for and first published in Wild Tongue Vol. 2 – How Should an Artist Be?, a zine by Timmah Ball and Azja…
I ask my mother to tell me the story of Egyptian Cinderella. She looks confused. “Do you mean Karamillah? That’s not a Cinderella story,” she says.
We’re not ‘misbehaving’. We’re in a space they regard as theirs. We don’t need permission to enter. That’s what scares them.
Stories of Nyi Loro Kidul go back to the beginning of Indonesia. There are many different versions of this story: here is the version my grandma told me.
In Samoa, they cover mirrors at night time.