Consider interviewing an athlete or if you are an athlete, utilizing your unique knowledge. Consider Olympic-related events, athletes who are positive role models, problems that arise in sports, traditional sports, and seasonal sports, from surfing to quidditch to the Special Olympics, there is so much to consider, even if you don't have experience playing a sport. There are numerous sports to consider, even when writing poetry. Sports writing has also been seen as journalism where the event or athlete is the subject. When preparing your entry, consider all the different ways to incorporate sports into your writing. Editor’s Choice Recipients will have the chance to read their work at iWRITE’s Annual Book Signing Celebration and receive additional media opportunities and prizes. One hundred and twenty-five winners will be chosen and receive one complimentary copy of the Anthology. Our winners will be announced on our website and published in the I Write Short Stories by Kids for Kids 14th Volume Anthology. The finalists will be named in September 2023. Fiction and Non-fiction short stories or articles, poetry, and art submissions are accepted from August 2022 through April 2023. This year's theme is Sports Writing and Sports Artwork. This first taste of success can last a lifetime! The iWRITE Non-Profit Organization offers students the opportunity to submit their writing and artwork to our annual publishing contest. Each year, young writers in the 3rd-12th grade all across the globe have the chance to be published authors. Publishing is a powerful incentive for learning and is a unique way to validate that a child’s voice should be heard. ![]() The backdrop is the rise of neoliberal audit cultures in UK universities sapping writing of its vitality and Hindu nationalism in India clamping down fiercely on debate, deliberation, and critique, with human rights activists and intellectuals imprisoned as alleged Maoists or “urban Naxals.” The overall aim of this essay is to contribute to opening the space for intellectual dissidence and ignite scholarly relevance beyond academia.THE DEADLINE FOR BOTH CONTESTS IS APRIL 30, 2023Ģ023 I Write Short Stories by Kids for Kids Publishing Contest Presents ![]() It is pressing for academics as writers to ask, What is our purpose? Who is our reader? How do we navigate the tensions between the constraints of academic evaluation criteria and the compulsions of writing for wider publics, scholarly fidelity and activist commitments, writing as scholars and producing journalism or fiction? This article reflects on these questions through the writing of the book Nightmarch, an anthropologist’s account of the spread of the Naxalites, a Marx-, Lenin-, and Mao-inspired guerrilla struggle among Indigenous people in the heart of India. A lethal mix of neoliberalism, authoritarianism, and right-wing populism is unfolding in different combinations around the world, and one of its key targets of attack is intellectual freedom. Why write? The spaces of intellectual dissidence once provided by universities-promoting disinterested inquiry, encouraging critical analysis, challenging conventional wisdoms-are increasingly controlled, if not squeezed out.
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