Literature on Lockdown: #CultureConnectsUs

For many, staying indoors is an unsettling experience. It’s been heartening to see the imaginative leaps being taken by many organisations and artists to help us through – sitting-room gigs, free theatre streams, virtual tours of museums and archives and galleries – but given the limitless choice of the internet, sometimes it’s hard to find your way around.Tonight, for example, you’re meant to be watching the ballet with one friend, seeing a play with another, while a third FaceTimes you so you can cook a new recipe together. You’ll almost wish it was a regular weekend again; one where you lie face-down on the floor, accuse your partner of something you know they didn’t do, and complain about how you’ve spent all day staring at a screen.So now, in these overwhelming, overloaded times, it’s the perfect opportunity for the British Council Literature team to launch our new blog series, Literature on Lockdown. For while books have never been the flashiest art form, book people are experts in the art of being alone. We know better than almost anyone how one person can find an intense connection, an exciting new idea, or a more vibrant world than the one outside their window, by quietly spending time with the work of another.The British Council Literature blog will offer you a path through the wealth of corona-content, presenting an overview of the different ways the literature community – in the UK and internationally – is continuing: how they are fostering relationships... Continue reading at 'British Council global'

[ British Council global | 2020-04-06 11:36:00 UTC ]
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[ The Bookseller | 2021-02-23 09:01:07 UTC ]
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[ The Guardian | 2021-02-20 07:00:25 UTC ]
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Oxford publishing groups launch post-lockdown working survey

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[ The Bookseller | 2021-02-16 17:30:43 UTC ]
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Mastering the Art of the Lockdown Book Recommendation

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[ Literrary Hub | 2021-02-08 09:49:32 UTC ]
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When Black kids – shut out from the whitewashed world of children's literature – took matters into their own hands

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The Sun and BookTrust in campaign to bring books to kids in lockdown

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