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y separately published work icon Voiceworks periodical issue  
Alternative title: Prime
Issue Details: First known date: 2013... no. 95 Summer 2013 of Voiceworks est. 1988 Voiceworks
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Contents

* Contents derived from the , 2013-2014 version. Please note that other versions/publications may contain different contents. See the Publication Details.
Lifeboati"The ocean keeps treasure", Amber Beilharz , single work poetry (p. 59)
Succulentsi"The night is wet:", Marjorie Main , single work poetry (p. 61)
Talking Back : 'Fanfiction, Fandom and the Collapse of the Fourth Wall', Hollie Pich , single work essay

'If you exist on the internet, odds are you've heard of fanfiction. For those of you who have been hiding under an electronic rock: fanfiction, or fanfic, uses the characters, sets and plotlines from other people's professional works to create new stories and artworks. While it's been around since the dawn of time - Shakespeare lifted Hamlet and King Lear from literary and historical sources - the birth of the internet has seen fanfiction flourish. Fans can now engage one another with ease, can talk and be heard, and there are hundreds of millions of words of fanfiction on the internet. There's fanfiction about books, movies, television shows, comic books, video games, rock bands, and even the Old Spice Guy. Online archives, such as fanfiction.net, archiveofourown.org and Livejournal.com, are home to millions of stories. Some of the most popular 'fandoms' (the fan culture organised around any given media) contain hundreds of thousands of stories: on fanfiction.net there are over 660,000 Harry Potter stories, more than 15,000 about One Direction, and even 778 about the Bible. Writing fanfiction can be a celebration, with fans unwilling to relinquish their favourite characters and settings. It can also be a critique, with writers modifying the original text in a form of protest, most notably through the dismantling of heterosexual norms. They aren't produced for profit: they are written because, as Lev Grossman wrote, fanfiction writers are 'fans, but they're not silent, couchbound consumers of media. The culture talks to them, and they talk back to the culture in its own language.''  (Publication abstract)

 

(p. 63-65)
Psych Wardi"Here you are.", Katelin Farnsworth , single work poetry (p. 66)
The Things That Last, Jessica Hoadley , single work short story

'We woke up when Linda got home from walking the dogs, their sandy claws scrabbling noisily on the lino. The screen door smashed closed behind them. It seemed earlier than she'd usually get home; yellow light slid around the edge of the curtains instead of the harsh white light of the fully risen sun. Andy threw the doona aside. I growled and rolled myself up in the doona while he jumped out of bed...' (Publication abstract)

 

(p. 67-69)
Departures / Arrivalsi"We wake", Zenobia Frost , single work poetry (p. 70)
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