All Kinds of Characters: Workshop with Cass Lynch
For Mob only – explore new personas and write characters with depth with Noongar author Cass Lynch.
Featuring
- Cass LynchSee more about Cass Lynch
Apr 27, 9:30 am - 11:30 pm
Centre for Stories
Cass Lynch is a Koreng Wudjari Noongar woman and is descended from the families of Ravensthorpe in the Great Southern region. She is a writer and Research Fellow and has a PhD in Creative Writing that explores Noongar stories that reference climate change.
This workshop creates a space to explore the different kinds of characters that can come together to express different dimensions of a plot, as well as how exploring with new characters can draw out ideas and meaning in the early phases of drafting. You will have time in the workshop to sketch out characters for a new or existing story.
This workshop was sponsored by Spinifex Foundation.
WHAT TO BRING?
TICKETS
Tickets are FREE but you must book below as spaces are limited. We are running this workshop for Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people only as part of our First Nations Writers WA Program, generously made possible thanks to Spinifex Foundation.
LOCATION AND TRANSPORT
The event will be held at Centre for Stories, Northbridge WA 6003. Centre for Stories is a wheelchair accessible venue.
The Perth train station is a 10-minute walk from Centre for Stories. The closest Wilson parking is 2 minutes away at Northbridge Central, 8/6 Errichetti Place.
PHOTOGRAPHY CONSENT
This event may be photographed. By registering for a ticket, you confirm you are giving consent for any photos and recordings to be used by Centre for Stories materials and communications. If you do not wish to be photographed, you must contact us at info@centreforstories.com.
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Cass Lynch
Collapse BioCass Lynch is a Koreng Wudjari Noongar woman, and is descended from the families of Ravensthorpe in the Great Southern region. She is a writer and Research Fellow, and has a PhD in Creative Writing that explores Noongar stories that reference climate change. She is a member of the Wirlomin Noongar Language and Stories group who focus on the revitalisation of culture and language connected to south coast Noongar people. She is the co-founder of Aboriginal literature project Woylie Fest, which facilitates bringing Noongar stories into print and training community members to be presenters. She has published short stories, essays, and poems, and her multimedia storytelling works have been featured at Perth Festival, Fremantle Biennale, PICA, Arts House Melbourne, CCA Glasgow, and more. Her Noongar language haikus, published in Westerly 64.1, won the 2019 Patricia Hackett Prize. Her short story 'Split', a creative impression of deep time Perth, can be found in the UQP publication Flock: First Nations Stories Then and Now.
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