Worldmaking

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Worldmaking

This is where my digital life comes together I'm a journalism academic at the University of Wollongong. My interests include: convergent journalism, literary journalism, myth & media, storytelling, art & image and social media I am completing a thesis about apocalyptic narratives, popular culture and news media This site assembles my Twitter feed and Delicious bookmarks which I sometimes comment on tag and add to.

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  • Until last week, Dean Atta was relatively unknown; unless you were deeply immersed in the world of spoken word you probably wouldn’t have heard of him. Then, in the wake of the conviction of Gary Dobson and David Norris for the murder of Stephen Lawrence, he wrote his poem I Am Nobody’s Nigger, and took the internet by storm. In five days, his poem had received in excess of 15,000 hits and gained him an extra 1,000 followers on Twitter. The poem was, he says, a reaction to “the injustice of the death of Stephen Lawrence”, and to the loose usage of the N-word. “Watching Panorama, where they reconstructed his murder, and hearing that the N-word was the last thing they said when they stabbed him really struck a chord with me.” (via Dean Atta: meet the iPhone poet | Books | The Guardian)

    Until last week, Dean Atta was relatively unknown; unless you were deeply immersed in the world of spoken word you probably wouldn’t have heard of him. Then, in the wake of the conviction of Gary Dobson and David Norris for the murder of Stephen Lawrence, he wrote his poem I Am Nobody’s Nigger, and took the internet by storm. In five days, his poem had received in excess of 15,000 hits and gained him an extra 1,000 followers on Twitter. The poem was, he says, a reaction to “the injustice of the death of Stephen Lawrence”, and to the loose usage of the N-word. “Watching Panorama, where they reconstructed his murder, and hearing that the N-word was the last thing they said when they stabbed him really struck a chord with me.” (via Dean Atta: meet the iPhone poet | Books | The Guardian)

    Posted on January 12, 2012

    Source: Guardian

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