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1
What about young adult non-fiction? profiling the young adult memoir /
In: Brien, DL 2015, 'What about young adult non-fiction?: profiling the young adult memoir', Text: Journal of Writing and Writing Courses, special issue no. 32, pp. 1-20, http://www.textjournal.com.au/speciss/issue32/content.htm (2015)
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2
Exploring the educative potential of eating disorder memoirs
In: McAllister, M, Brien, DL, Alexander, J & Flynn, T 2014, 'Exploring the educative potential of eating disorder memoirs', The Journal of Mental Health Training, Education and Practice, vol. 9, no. 2, pp. 69-78, http://dx.doi.org/10.1108/JMHTEP-07-2013-0026 (2014)
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3
‘Sydney harbour water has just the right amount of salt for soup’ Englishes in fictionalized biographical writing /
In: Owens, A & Brien, DL 2014, '‘Sydney harbour water has just the right amount of salt for soup’: Englishes in fictionalized biographical writing', in Peer Reviewed Proceedings of the 5th Annual Conference Popular Culture Association of Australia and New Zealand (PopCAANZ), 18-20 June, Hobart, Australia, http://popcaanz.com/conferenceproceedings_2014/Biography_Owens_Brien.pdf (2014)
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4
Vale dearest Sandra death and digital afterlives /
In: Brien, DL 2014, 'Vale dearest Sandra: death and digital afterlives', Text, special issue 27, pp. 1-10, http://www.textjournal.com.au/speciss/issue27/content.htm (2014)
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5
Writing themselves: using creative writing to facilitate international student accounts of their intercultural experience
In: Owens, AR & Brien, DL 2014, 'Writing themselves: using creative writing to facilitate international student accounts of their intercultural experience', New Writing: International Journal for the Practice and Theory of Creative Writing, vol. 11, no. 3, pp. 359-374, http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/14790726.2014.932815 (2014)
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6
I have pen, book and food; now, let’s write: Indigenizing a postgraduate writing workshop
Fredericks, Bronwyn; Brien, Donna Lee. - : Sage Publications, 2014
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7
Facilitiating ‘storied relationships to a place’: the capacity of the university to lead communities towards resilience through creative arts activities
In: School of Arts and Social Sciences (2011)
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8
A truly international contribution : [book review] Graeme Harper and Jeri Kroll (eds), Creative Writing Studies: Practice, Research and Pedagogy, Multilingual Matters, Clevedon UK, 2008.
In: Brien, D 2009, 'A truly international contribution', Text: journal of writing and writing courses, vol. 13, no. 1, pp. 1-7, http://www.textjournal.com.au/april09/brien_rev.htm (2009)
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9
An “odd couple” for teaching writing : the tutorial takes in the committee meeting
In: Williamson, D, McDougall, R & Brien, D 2009, 'An “odd couple” for teaching writing: the tutorial takes in the committee meeting', International Journal of Teaching and Learning in Higher Education, vol. 20, no. 3 (2009), pp.362-372, http://www.isetl.org/ijtlhe/pdf/IJTLHE445.pdf (2009)
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10
Editorial introduction : The margins and mainstreams papers : the refereed proceedings of the 14th conference of the Australian Association of Writing Programs, 2009
In: Freiman, M & Brien, D 2009, 'Editorial introduction' in M. Freiman, (ed.) The Margins and Mainstreams Papers: the refereed proceedings of the 14th conference of the Australian Association of Writing Programs, 2009. Hamilton, New Zealand, November, 2009, pp. 1-5, http://aawp.org.au/files/FreimanBrien_final.pdf (2009)
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11
Modelling best practice in supervision of research higher degrees in writing
In: Williamson, R., Brien, D. and J. Webb 2008 'Modelling best practice in supervision of research higher degrees in writing', in D. Brien and L. Neave (eds.), The Creativity and Uncertainty Papers: The refereed proceedings of the 13th conference of the Australian Association of Writing Programs, University of Technology, Sydney, 27 - 29 November, 2008. (2008)
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12
"Agnostic" thinking : creative writing as practice-led research
In: Webb, J & Brien, DL 2008, '"Agnostic" thinking: creative writing as practice-led research', Working papers in art and design, vol. 5, http://sitem.herts.ac.uk/artdes_research/papers/wpades/index.html (viewed 18/08/09) (2008)
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13
Rescue from the deep end the case for postgraduate awards in teaching writing /
In: Williamson, R & Brien, D 2007, 'Rescue from the deep end: the case for postgraduate awards in teaching writing', paper presented at And Is: The 12th annual conference of the Australian Association of Writing Programs, University of Canberra, ACT, 21-23 November. http://aawp.org.au/and-papers-proceedings-12th-conference-aawp (2007)
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14
Integrity in planning postgraduate curriculum developing research degrees in writing that work /
In: Brien, D 2006, 'Integrity in planning postgraduate curriculum: developing research degrees in writing that work' in C Eckersley, D Booth, H Cluff, M Sternbeck & J Scott (eds), Educational integrity: values in teaching, learning & research, 2nd Asia-Pacific Educational Integrity Conference, Newcastle, NSW, 2nd-3rd December, 2005, pp. 42-48, http://www.newcastle.edu.au/conference/apeic/papers_pdf/brien_edd.pdf (viewed 17/3/2010) (2006)
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15
Collaborative practice categorising forms of collaboration for practitioners
In: Brien, D & Brady, T 2004, 'Collaborative practice - categorising forms of collaboration for practitioners', Text: journal of writing and writing courses, vol. 7, no. 2, pp. 1-12, viewed 4 March, 2010, http://www.textjournal.com.au/oct03/brienbrady.htm (2004)
Abstract: Collaborative works are intrinsically different than books written by one author alone.the decision to collaborate determines the work's contours, and the way it is read. Books with two authors are specimens of relation, and show writing to be a quality of motion and exchange, not a fixed thing. (Koestenbaum 1989: 2) Faced with the prospects of a collaborative writing venture, a contract and a tight deadline for our collaborative text The Girls Guide to Real Estate (Brady & Brien 2002) we realised that our understanding of collaboration had not been much more than a general motherhood concept tossed about with nods of approval but rarely unpacked. In setting out to write our collaborative text we needed more insights into the various forms of collaboration and more to hang our authorial hats on than those feel-good pegs. In addition, at a time when collaboration is increasingly becoming part of a writers' working life, and as teachers and practitioners of writing, we felt we needed more understanding of the collaborative process in general. A survey of the literature found that much of the discourse concerning collaboration clusters the various diverse forms in a way which was unhelpful to us. One form of clustering, for instance, was so broad as to render all art and writing collaborative -which has a point, of course, but is not useful to us here. Another concertinaed together ghost-writing, biographical writing and the formation of literary movements, as collaborative processes of the same ilk. (Clemens & McCooey 2000, Chadwick & D. Courtivron 1993) While we have no problem in recognising that these are all kinds of collaboration, such generalised groupings did not allow us enough scope to unpack the processes and issues relating to our specific form of collaboration. We felt that any analyses of collaborative writing which would be useful to the practitioner first needed to separate out the various forms of collaboration occurring in the arts, in general, and in writing in particular. This separation needed to be in terms of authorial intention and credit, along with expected outcomes and goals. In other words, the division of various forms of collaboration needed to be made from the creative practitioner's point of view and not from that of the text's reader or critic. It needed to come from where the writer is standing looking outwards through the text, not from where a reader looks inwards towards the text. Consequently, we found it necessary, in the first instance, to devise a series of categories of collaboration. In doing this, we have, to date, isolated twelve separate forms of collaborative practice. It should be noted that any given work, at various stages of its development, can move or slide from one form of collaboration to another. This movement between categories generates its own concerns, which are discussed below.
Keyword: 190402 Creative Writing (incl. Playwriting); 950203 Languages and Literature; Authorship; TBA
URL: http://hdl.cqu.edu.au/10018/41961
http://www.textjournal.com.au/oct03/brienbrady.htm
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