The  Creative and Critical Practice Research Group (CCPRG) explores the mutually interdependent relationship between creative and critical writing. The critical insights of practising creative writers, gained from the subjective experience of the writing process, may be lost to scholars who wish to establish a critical object of study in their fields. Conversely, theoretical insights about interpreting texts, grounded in a knowledge of literary history and cultural criticism, may remain unheard by aspiring writers, even though such insights may be potentially ‘creative’. 

The creative-critical group is an interdisciplinary forum for the benefit of the research community throughout the Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences and beyond. The CCPRG’s mission is to: 
  • provide a home and shop window for the considerable outputs of creative writing. 
  • organise research/practice-led discussion groups, panels, guest lectures, roundtables, presentations and interviews which will provide intellectual coherence to our thriving constituency of PhD students. 
  • develop partnerships with creative industries in close collaboration with the Cultural Institute. 
  • provide an interdisciplinary hub within the Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences (and potentially cross-Faculty) for those working in creative writing (including media), creative-critical and/or critical practice. 
  • in partnership with the Cultural Institute, support career-development networking opportunities for those working in creative fields (both staff and postgraduates). 
  • constitute a forum in which the growing body of Creative Writing PGRs can work alongside an interdisciplinary network of staff. 
  • advocate for arts funding. 
  • work in close partnership with the Cultural Institute to provide a range of public engagement and outreach events for diverse target audiences, including the possibility of the incorporation of more critical-creative events in the future. 

Projects

Adaptations

A discussion of the art of adaptation, ranging across screen, radio, and popular culture.  

After Rilke Fairy Tales and Fables Horror and the Taboo Memory

People

The Creative and Critical Practice Research Group (CCPRG) is a forum for the exchange of views between writers of all types: poets, novelists, short story writers, dramatists, literary critics, scholars, essayists and journalists. The group explores the interconnected practice of creative reading and critical writing in a series of regular meetings throughout the academic year. We also engage with the creative industries which, via the Cultural Institute and departmental partnerships, bring this writing to the public in all its forms. 

Management Board:Dr Alan Bilton and Dr Richard Robinson (Co-Convenors), Dr Elaine Canning, Professor Kirsti Bohata, Professor Julian Preece, Professor Tudur Hallam and Dr Alexia Bowler. 

Co-Convenor

Dr Alan Bilton is an academic and novelist who lectures American Studies and English Literature and Creative Writing at Swansea University. He is the author of two, dreamlike, surrealist novels, The Sleepwalkers’ Ball (2009) published by the independent Welsh press Alcemi and Unknown Sea (2014), along with the short story collection Anywhere Out of the World (2016). 

Dr Alan Bilton
Alan Bilton

Co-Convenor

Dr Richard Robinson is Associate Professor in the Department of Literature, Media and Language. He works in twentieth-century and contemporary writing, with a particular interest in modernism and its afterlife, style, Irish Studies, border studies, and aspects of Italian film and fiction. 

Richard Robinson
Richard Robinson

Academic Publications

students in library

PhD students that have participated in CCPRG:

students in library
PhD Student  Topic Title
Sarah Tanburn  Taking Liberty 
Owen Bridge   Twittering Machines 
Oliviah Rix-Taylor   Dystopian Fiction: The Midnight Castle 
Tamzin Whelan  A Novel of the Women’s Revolution 
Sue Dickson  Portrait of a Muse    
Vicky Brewster   Hauntings in 21st Century Fiction 
Susanne Rösner  Using Creative Writing to Imagine and Explore a Sustainable, Optimistic Path into the Future 
Seren Williams  Translating Culture-Specific References in French and German Dubs of Disney Films 
Jan Wigley   Sugar and Spice and All Things 
Daniel Mitchell  Fair: A Radio Drama 
Julie-Ann Rees  How Ancient and Modern Stories Help us to Heal 
Ray Cluley   Marilyn, Marilyn is now Marilyn/Marilyn 
Rachael Llewellyn  A Novel: The Crow 

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