Wednesday 17 December 2014

The NEW Silverfish Writing Programme



Do any of the following mean anything to you?

Do you believe in the power of the story?
Have you wondered why do some stories work while others don’t?
Do you understand the concept of the 'Right Brain'?
Do you believe that it is possible to dig deep into one's psyche and unleash the genius within?
Do you simply enjoy telling stories?
Do you want to create/write stories for your children/grandchildren)? 
Do you believe writing is therapeutic?
Do you simply want to write to express yourself?
Do you want to be able to write what publisher's want?
Do you believe in the magic of writing?


If you are even remotely interested in any of these, read on.


Write what publishers want
The universe is made of stories, not atoms -- Muriel Rukeyser

The world is full of stories. We, humans, are the strangest of all animals. We may miss meals (ask your teenager buried in a book or your auntie hooked on a television soap) but not our stories. Even in famine stricken zones, while people wait for the food trucks to arrive, they tell one another stories to keep alive. In war zones, where life is in danger every single minute, people cannot resist telling stories. All religions have tons of stories that are constantly repeated. Stories are part of our very being, our claim to be human.

We are surrounded by stories every waking minute of the day. When we turn on our radio or television to listen to the news, or to watch a drama or sitcom or even a cooking show, when we open our newspapers or surf the net for news, when we go to the movies, to a dance, listen to a song, or look at a painting, when we go to the office, pitch a proposal to our boss, our clients, meet our co-workers when we relax over tea and gossip, or tell them about our day, or listen to their stories. When we read books, we read stories. And stories will make us laugh or cry or angry, and dozens of other things. We will love characters or we hate them. Good stories never leave us indifferent. We have a desperate need to tell stories in whatever form. That’s why some of us want to become writers. But if one does not write what publisher's want, one does not get published. So what do publisher's want?

Why do some stories work while others don’t?

Now we look at another point: how many times have we heard people, coming back after attending a creative writing course, complaining that they still can't write? (One story a year or one in ten years does not count.) There is no shortage of creative writing courses, workshops and books in the world teaching: basic storytelling, rules of plots, pace, characters, conflicts, structure, busting writers' block and etc and etc. In other words: lots of mechanical rules and routines. A student, who has registered himself in the hope of learning some of the magic that makes writers tick, comes away disappointed possibly thinking that he is fated never to become a writer and, maybe, gives up altogether.

Me, I am a publisher, though I do have written a book of short stories (more to test my theories than anything else) and I do all the writing on The Silverfish website. I started publishing ten years ago, and I must have read well over a couple of thousand short stores and a few hundred novels submitted to us for publishing. (Yeah, I am the only one here.) And you can add to that the over half a century of personal reading, and all the editing I do to pay my rent. But one thing has always intrigued me. Why do some stories work while others don’t? Can writing be taught?

Harnessing the Right side of the Brain

The Silverfish Writing Programme is, to a large extent, inspired by Betty Edwards' book on drawing. I came across the book some ten years ago. Yet, another self help book, I thought. Still I always wanted to draw and decided to give it a go. Within three weeks I was drawing the likeness of my face by looking into the mirror. It actually worked! It is, possibly, the only self help book that works the way it promises. And, after reading it, I wondered for years if writing could be taught by some similar technique. I came to the conclusion that a direct 'conversion' was not possible. That would be like asking a swim coach to teach competitive cycling. But there is one common theme in both writing and drawing: learning how to see. If you want to become a writer you must learn how to see and write what you see, not what you think you see, just as you will need to if you want to to draw.

It is often said that genius cannot be taught. Writing with the Right Side of the Brain programme acknowledges that. Only a certain part of writing can be taught, the rest has to be discovered from inside and dragged out by the individuals by themselves. We believe genius cannot be taught, but it can be learned. An average person is not one but two: the conscious craftsman who can learn rules and techniques, and the unconscious artist or 'creative writer'. Or, in 'new age' terminology, every individual consists of a left-brain person and a right-brain person. Yin and Yang. Siva and Sakti. Unfortunately, the two sometimes (often?) don't talk to one another. The programme is designed to trick the two sides into working together. In most people, years of neglect has made the artistic side 'rusty'. The programme is designed to teach you how to discover that creative side, and to switch from one to the other effortlessly. It will take a little time and practice, but you should feel something happening on the very first day.

Long before a student attends a formal creative writing course, something else has to happen. He has to learn to become a writer. It is a mysterious process - this becoming a writer. It requires a awakening of a certain instinct inside. Writing can be all consuming. It can happen even when you are nowhere near your writing pad (if you still do longhand) or your computer. It is a temperament, a desire, a feeling, an impulse … and all those things combined. It is both conscious and unconscious. And just as it is not possible to teach someone how to ride a bicycle by theory alone (get on the bike, sit on the saddle, push off, paddle and balance!), the same applies to writing. But once learned it will not be forgotten. It’s like swimming. Remember that first time you went into the deep end, and you thought you were going to die? Then the next few weeks of fighting with the water, splashing and tiring yourself out? Then, finally, the realisation, the appearance of the smooth relaxed strokes, and you become one with the water? That’s what writing is is like, doing it day in and day out effortlessly.


Silverfish's success

The Silverfish Writing Programme was launched in June 2006. We published Shih Li Kow, one of our early participants, in December 2008. Her book, Ripples and other stories, was one of the six (from all over the world) that was short listed for the Frank O’Connor International Short Story Award in Cork, Ireland in June 2009. (Previous winners of the Frank O’Connor Award are Jhumpa Lahiri, Haruki Murakami and Yiyun Li.) Interesting, Shih-Li Kow admits that she started writing seriously only after attending the Silverfish Writing Programme.

Didn’t think of it much at that time. But, a Writing Programme that has produced a writer of international standard in just two years is surely worth crowing about. And we are working with several more writers in the pipeline. Do you think you can be one of them? Shih-Li Kow is a single mother, who is a chemical engineer, who works galley-slave hours at a real estate management company in the city, and who still finds time to write daily.

Air and time and light and space

This 10-week writing programme has been designed with the average individual in mind: the average individual who likes to write, who wants to write but keeps running into walls. The most common and crippling of all excuses is: I have no time. I have a full time day job, I have to fetch and ferry my kids, I have no time to write ...

"No baby, when you become a writer, there is no time. There is no space, there is no light, and there is no air either. Everything simply stops." (Apologies, Charles Bukowski.)

When your right brain takes over, everything else simply stops. And when that happens, it is pure magic. Discover, experience and rejoice. Just like in learning to ride a bike, the hardest part is the beginning. But whether you become an Olympic Champion is another matter, though there is nothing to stop you from trying. Becoming a writer is a life enriching experience. Learning to write with the right side of the brain is not simply about the buzz. It is also about writing what editors and publishers want.

Do you, seriously, want to become a writer? Give yourself this gift that will last you a lifetime. But please be prepared to work. (More than 50,000 words should be written during the programme - enough fodder to embark on a novel or a book of short stories.) Drag that genius of yours out from in there. Silverfish Books will be your personal trainer.



OUTLINE OF PROGRAMME SYLLABUS

The programme which will be spread over 10 weeks — which means participants will be required to work on exercises on their own daily and fill up job sheets. (You can cheat, but you will only cheat yourself.)

1. REVEALING THE RIGHT BRAIN: AN Introduction to right brain technique, and starting out on writing as a career
2. WRITE A CHARACTER: Writing characters, being characters
3. LIVE WRITING: Writing from observations of real people
4. TALKING PHOTOGRAPHS: Using photographs as writing tools
5. THE PRACTICE STORY: Putting it all together, casting scenes
6. BASIC BOOK ANALYSIS: How to read books as a writer not as a reader and how to learn from the masters.
7. LEARNING TO SEE: Learning to see like an artist
8. ROOTS OF GENIUS: How to unleash the genius that resides within us
9. YOUR WORST CRITIC: Learning how to put a distance between your own work and yourself to criticise objectively
10. AN INTRODUCTION TO WRITING NOVELS

In general the programme will cover writing of characters, use of dialogues, plotting and pacing, choosing points of view, use of an authoritative writer’s voice, rhythm, structure and style, use of language, use of flashbacks, and generally writing organically (that is from your very being as opposed to mechanically).


To register, click the following link

http://www.silverfishbooks.com/Silverfish/Version4/Writing/WrtitingProgramme.html#overview

The NEW Silverfish Writing Programme

Class starting: Saturday, 31 January, 2015
(Registration open: 1 December 2014)
Limited to 10 participants. Will be held at the premises of Silverfish Books at 28-1 Jalan Telawi, Bangsar Baru, Kuala Lumpur every Saturday for 10 weeks (excluding holidays) from 10.30am to 12.30 pm.
Price: RM1000.00
(THERE WILL BE AN EARLYBIRD DISCOUNT OF 10% FOR THOSE WHO REGISTER BEFORE January 10, 2015- SO DECIDE EARLY)

Friday 5 December 2014

My Performing Arts Agency Announces Calls for 2015 Funding for the Performing Arts

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My Performing Arts Agency (MyPAA), the organiser behind the prestigious Royal Arts Gala, and the National Department for Culture & Arts (JKKN) together with the Ministry of Tourism & Culture (MOTAC) are pleased to announce that the funds raised during The Royal Arts Gala in January 2014 is now ready to receive applications from Malaysian practitioners of the performing arts. The fund was raise to energise the collaborative partnerships for the creation and development of new arts ventures in Malaysia and have been channelled to the ‘Kumpulan Wang Amanah Kebudayaan dan Kebajikan Penggiat Seni’. Last year, a total of 31 out of 170 entries were awarded funding from The Royal Arts Gala Fund. Those who were awarded include Pentas Project Theatre Production, Temple of Fine Arts, Hands Percussion, Five Arts Centre, Shakespeare Demystified, ACX Productions amongst others.

Some notable works made possible with the contribution of The Royal Arts Gala Fund include:
  • Teater Kompilasi Namron by Rumah Anak Teater: a Malaysiantheatre work staged at Esplanade,Singapore
  • By Lee Wushu Arts Theatre: a Malaysian movement work staged at The 9th Dancing Festival of Chiayi, Taiwan
  • Flatland by TerryandtheCuz a collaboration between Australian and Malaysian artistes in contemporary dance
  • Line Of Exchange Between Two Dance Practices by Lim How Ngean: a collaboration between Cambodian and Malaysian artistes exploring classical and contemporary dance
  • Profiling Malaysian Community Artists, their Projects and Innovative Approaches by Arts-­‐Ed Penang: Research and documentation
  • Peperangan Bintang by Actiontintoy Design Laboratory: Research and documentation
The Royal Arts Gala Fund is made available thanks to the corporate partners and arts enthusiasts who purchased tables during the second Royal Arts Gala that took place in January 2014 at the former Istana Negara. This is an annual exclusive and significant arts gala-­‐ a synergy of efforts by the government, the corporate sector and the players in the arts and creative industry-­‐ also intended to raise the profile of the arts in Malaysia and to encourage the private sector to be supportive of the development of artisticand cultural aspects of Malaysia.

The Royal Arts Gala this year also saw the presentation of The Royal Medallion awards-­‐ one to an individual and another to a corporate company-­‐in recognising the ongoing contributions towards the growth and importance of the arts in the country. YBhg Datuk Ramli Ibrahim of Sutra Foundation was honoured with the Anugerah Tokoh Seni (Kreatif) award, and Sime Darby Foundation with the Anugerah Tokoh Seni (Korporat) award.

The aim of The Royal Arts Gala Fund encourages global culture mobility, with the larger aim of extending networks and supporting collaboration between cultural professionals from Malaysia and international partners.

The funding of up to RM30,000 include can be utilised for the below:
  • The promotion of Malaysian artists and works overseas (eg. in performing arts market, festival, showcase, pitch session, tour)
  • The facilitation of international co-­productions and collaborations involving Malaysian and overseas talent 
  • The development of technical and managerial skills among Malaysian performing arts managers and administrators 
  • Research and documentation projects in the performing arts The National Creative Industry Policy (DIKN) defined performing arts inclusive of dance, music and theatre
These performing arts ideaswill be submitted online via mypaa.com.my and will then be presented to the Performing Arts Selection Panel (the Selection Panel), which is set up to assess on the viability of the projects prior to the release of grants or resource needed for the project. Applicants will be evaluated against a few criteria as well as the strength of relevant supporting materials submitted.

The Selection Panel is made up of reputable members of the private, public and performing arts sectors, will act as the gatekeepers to ensure that the proposals fit the requirements. The Selection Panel is chaired by Puan Shahira Bazari, Director Khazanah Nasional Berhad.

According to Founder and Director of MyPAA, Izan Satrina, "The case of the arts in Malaysia is yet to be a priority...but there are some who strongly believe in the power of the arts, and have supported the development of Malaysian arts in their own capacity and there are some who have generously contributed to The Royal Arts Gala Fund. We truly appreciate these angels who have contributed to widen access to the arts throughtout the country, as well as to maintain and develop our arts institutions in Malaysia. Consistency in whatever we do is important and hence we hope to have this steady form of fund generation on a yearly basis to provide the industry some assistance," 

Individuals or companies interested in applying for the grant can do so via MyPAA’s website at www.mypaa.com.my. The application deadline is 11 January 2014 and successful candidates will be contacted in early March 2015. Further enquiries can be emailed to azirah@mypaa.com.my or ragfund@mypaa.com.my.

Monday 1 December 2014

Insights From Global Mobile Game Developers Conference 2014, Chengdu, China.


The Global Mobile Game Developers Conference (GMGDC) is China’s largest B2B convention for
mobile game developers. Held on September 24-25, GMGDC was all about “Enabling Success” – connecting developers to local and international distribution channels and creating partnerships for growth and investment.

Hosted in Chengdu –China’s developer and high-tech manufacturing hub – this year’s event brought together over 5,000 developers and industry professionals, 300 domestic and international media, and over a 100 speakers from over 20 countries. Not only are the industry’s top minds are back to speak, but you also get to hear from the freshest up-and-comers in their first ever Indie Pitch – where independent mobile game developers pitch their best game ideas.


If you are a Malaysian and you have never been to China. The trip itself is already an ‘enlightening’ one especially if you only care about where you are going to and where will  you be staying at.  Why? Simply because China practices different internet policy. More than 2,701 websites are or were blocked in mainland China (excluding Hong Kong and Macau) under the country's policy of Internet censorship. For the full list of the blocked websites, you can always yahoo! (Yes Yahoo!  not Google since Google is in the list)  or refer to wikipedia. So, prepare yourself with the absence of Google, Youtube, Facebook, blogspot and 2,697 more websites.

We, Malaysians are so used to downloading mobile games and applications through GooglePlay for
Tencent
androids users, or Itunes for Iphone users. Since GooglePlay is not available in China, you must be wondering how do mainlanders download their applications. Well, there are more than 20 mobile applciations stores available as alternatives for those in China to download their applications. Among of them are Pandaapp,  Baidu App Store, Opera Mobile App Store, Tencent App Game (From the developer of WeChat) , AppChina and Wandoujia. So, if you only know how to Google something or download apps via GooglePlay, please download one of these alternatives before you depart to China.

If you are one of those who intend to penetrate China’s mobile game market, it is advisable for you to participate in Global Mobile Game Developers Conference. Among of the tips that you can get from the experts sharing sessions are:

1)The platform for downloading apps in China is not as concentrated as in Malaysia or other countries. So it’s quite difficult for others to penetrate the mobile games market in China; instead of targeting only GooglePlay, you have to target a lot more mobile apps store

2)Language barrier. Majority of the Chinese does not even speak/read/write English. So, please invest on translation. (China uses Simplified Chinese Character while Taiwan and Hong Kong uses Traditional Chinese Character)

3)
Different social media: Chinese uses different set of social media to spread word of mouth regarding their favourite games. Wechat is the Chinese’s Facebook since it has the ‘moments’ functions which resembles Facebook’s status updateds. Since blogspot is not available (read: blocked), the Chinese uses their own microblog which is called WeiBo to blog about their favourite games.  (In Hong Kong and Taiwan, Facebook, Google and etc are not blocked)


In short, you have to really study the market in China before trying to market your mobile games here. Or for easier alternative, find someone to cooperate with or to partner with. Someone who really knows the market here. Maybe you can find one in the 3rd Global Mobile Game Developers Conference next year. Who knows?