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Untitled - Literature Wales

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SomeDifficultiesPersistThe past year has not been one unalloyedstreak of light. Difficulties have persisted. Thetotal resource available for the payment ofauthors has remained largely uninflated.As Academi has noted on a number ofprevious occasions Welsh authors are alltoo often called upon to work for derisoryrates. To see the emergence of a strata ofprofessional writers in <strong>Wales</strong> requires thenation to make available to them work inappropriate quantity and to pay marketrates. Despite constant pressure 2008-2009has seen us move no nearer this target.The problem of author’s copyright in a digitalage continues, with writers divided as to howthey should proceed. Those who wish to seetheir work disseminated as widely as possibleand who seek little or no financial rewardare directly contrasted by the many whoseek to live by what they produce. Boundup as it is with the desire to see our culturemade available to all who seek engagement,resolution to the issue seems as far awayas ever.Success VastlyOutweighs Failure– Some HighlightsThe word ‘some’ is probably inadequatehere. 2008-2009 has been as busy a year asanyone on the Academi staff can remember.Schemes, projects and proposals put intrain in earlier years have come gloriouslyto fruition and in their wake a whole newraft of literature events and activities havecome on stream. The joint venture betweenAcademi and seven south <strong>Wales</strong> Valleyslocal authorities, backed by aid from the ACWLottery fund, has blossomed. Full details aregiven in the South <strong>Wales</strong> Valleys <strong>Literature</strong>Development section further on in thisreport. Headline events have included twowell-attended conferences (one on sciencefiction and the other on engagement withwriting); five youth-orientated connectionsbetween sport, youth and authorship (SurfCult, All Skilled Up, Boxing Beats, the SportingAcademi, & Poetry for the Ashes Test Match);as well as events and masterclasses involvingeveryone from reluctant readers to railwaycommuters. At the <strong>Wales</strong> Millennium CentreAcademi presented more book launches,readings, masterclasses, workshops andwriting squad meetings than at any timesince the Centre first opened. Choman Hardiread Kurdish verse, superperformer MartinDaws recited Skin Tight The Sidewalk, andformer <strong>Wales</strong> Book of the Year winner CarylLewis revealed the mechanics of the novel.There were co-operative ventures with theUrdd, Diversions Dance, WNO, Tŷ Cerdd andwith the Centre itself.Academi ran two members’ conferences – onthe work of sixties poet John Tripp and onwriting and the supernatural. Meic Stephensturned 70 with a celebratory evening at StFagans. Bay Lit was the Shock of the Newin October. World Poets reached <strong>Wales</strong> ontour. Visiting Chinese writers worked withtranslators at St Donat’s and performedthe results at the Senedd. There were fourguided bus tours to literary locations. Asa taster for the <strong>Wales</strong> Smithsonian FolklifeFestival in June 2009 Academi sent adelegation of practitioners to Washington inMarch just to show that <strong>Wales</strong> was much morethan Dylan Thomas.

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