DURA homepage
Skip main navigation menu
  • Home
  • About
  • Contact Us
  • A-Z
  • Submissions
Skip main content
Featured image of Women Writing the Weird II: Dreadful Daughters

Women Writing the Weird II: Dreadful Daughters

As a genre, ‘weird fiction’ is defined by its peripheral position on the boundaries of mainstream literature. Hoag’s multi-authored short story collection, all penned by female writers, encompasses this position by utilising a concoction of genres such as horror, science fiction, fairy tale and even Greek mythology, all with a shared thematic concern, namely( as Read More

Featured image of Pluto

Pluto

In his review of Pluto for Stride Magazine, Andy Brown is overtly critical of Glyn Maxwell’s “highly repetitious deployment of forms of ‘parallelisms’”, both synonymous and antithetic. That this style recurs throughout the collection cannot be denied. The first stanza of the opening poem, “Byelaws”, epitomises this technique: Never have met me, know me well, Read More

Featured image of 365 Stories

365 Stories

“A boy goes out to the shop and doesn’t come back. A boy goes out to the shop and doesn’t come back for seven years. A boy goes out to the shop and when he comes back seven years later he is a girl. These are stories, if I am not mistaken.” ~ “Story” (2nd Read More

Featured image of The Days of Surprise

The Days of Surprise

There is a feeling that had Seamus Heaney entered any Dublin pub everyone would have known him, whereas Ted Hughes would have passed unnoticed in a London bar. Paul Durcan sits very near Heaney’s right hand in Irish affections, which may come as some surprise on this side of the water. Certainly, my first reading Read More

Featured image of On reading Debasish Lahiri’s First Will and Testament

On reading Debasish Lahiri’s First Will and Testament

I have been reading Debasish Lahiri’s’s poetry over the past few years. He has sent me his poems in a steady stream from Kolkata where he lives and writes, and from his various journeys both East and West and I have been struck by their many-layered intensity. It is therefore a pleasure to see his Read More

Featured image of The Disappearance of Adèle Bedeau

The Disappearance of Adèle Bedeau

“Manfred suddenly felt the gloomy effect of the wine. […] The bar had fallen silent. The regulars had suddenly ran out of topics of conversation, or perhaps felt self-conscious on account of the previously unnoticed stranger in their midst. The place was tainted now. He was no longer a nobody, but somebody who had been Read More

Featured image of Stanza Stones

Stanza Stones

“I’ve said on many occasions that if a poem, once written, is exactly the same as its author first imagined it would be, then it is almost certainly a failure, and that artistic success must always involve a process of transformation.” This is Simon Armitage reflecting on the “almost electrically bright” Snow Stone poem’s lettering Read More

Featured image of Tim Stead MBE: Object Maker and Seed Sower

Tim Stead MBE: Object Maker and Seed Sower

Asked what he did, the nineteen-year-old Stead described himself as an “object maker”; later, he added “seed sower”. Both are true of his extraordinary creative engagement in a too-short life. Originally from Cheshire, Stead trained in Fine Art at Trent Polytechnic, where he scoured riverbanks for boat carcasses and stole sleepers from sidings. Unaltered objets Read More

Featured image of Classical Art: the Legacy of the Ancients

Classical Art: the Legacy of the Ancients

Coinciding with Roman Empire: Power and People, Classical Art: the Legacy of the Ancients illustrates ancient Greek and Roman culture through a dynamic contrast of paintings, sculptures, screen-prints, ceramics and drawings. Drawn from Dundee’s collection of fine art, the artworks embody the mythical influences of the ancient Greeks and the Romans. The ancient Greeks’ focus Read More

Featured image of Men Gather, in Speech…

Men Gather, in Speech…

Men Gather, in Speech… is a strikingly philosophical exhibition of films by artists Emma Charles, Rose English and Abri de Swardt, which share a physical space and a connecting theme of language as a rich and perplexing medium in an artistic context. The entrance to the Cooper Gallery features text and audio interviews with the Read More

  • « Previous Page
  • 1
  • …
  • 152
  • 153
  • 154
  • 155
  • 156
  • …
  • 224
  • Next Page »
DURA facebook page

Copyright © 2025 DURA :: Dundee Review of the Arts (DURA)