Bloomers Magazine Issue 07

£10.00

Artists & Writers: Brass Neck Press, Cóilín O’Connell, Edy Fung, Eimear Walshe, Frank Sweeney, Kate McSharry, Mot Collins, No_Matter_Here, Sofia Rudi Kent, Dr. Aoife Bhreatnach, Cora Lenihan, Eadaoin Flynn, Emily O’Brien, Hannah McNulty, Lauren Conway, Lean Corbett

Creative Director: Enid Conway

Binding: Paperback

Publisher: Bloomers

Designer: Diane Dear

Published: 2021

ISBN: 0-9551763-0-1

 

 

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Description

ISSUE 07: RING OUT WILD BELLS

RING OUT, WILD BELLS is a collection of texts informed by artistic acts of narrative reclamation pertaining to the land and the artist-led and independent publishing environment in Ireland. It contains contributions from prominent emerging voices in the arts and literary spheres active in Ireland including artist Eimear Walshe, academic Dr Aoife Bhreatnach, activist Kate O’Shea (Durty Books) and the National Irish Visual Artists Library (NIVAL).

 

To evoke the Irish Leaving Cert syllabus, Adrienne Rich asserts that, “The impulse to create begins – often terribly and fearfully – in a tunnel of silence,” and that “every real poem is the breaking of an existing silence.” For the title of this issue, we wanted to celebrate the noise, the rebellion and the righteousness of claiming one’s own narrative. To properly understand noise, we need to understand silence as generative; as part of the story. This issue began by researching the context that Bloomers exists within, the changing environment that gave way to our organisation and the legacy of projects that came before us.

Investigating our position as an Irish, artistled publishing collective that operates within a feminist ethos meant exploring past examples of feminist publishing in Ireland (as well as a number of contemporary, alternative publishing and storytelling platforms) in order to better understand the experiences and motivations that drive us all. Limiting this context to the island of Ireland imbued our research with a focus on geography, a common land that we all inhabit – and this, in turn, shaped our inquiry. Examining geographically embedded narratives and the relationship between the reclamation of story and space became one of the central themes within our research.