NZYWF 2024_Programme_FINAL_DIGITAL
Welcome to interactive presentation, created with Publuu. Enjoy the reading!
CORE FUNDERS
SUPPORTERS & PARTNERS
MAJOR SPONSORS
ROBERT LORD
WRITERS
COTTAGE
TRUST
Tukua atu te hiku o te taniwha ki tana
wai e rere nei – Release your hold on
the tail of the taniwha so that it may
roam free in the flowing water.
Guided by one of my favourite
whakataukī, my curatorship for this
year’s NZ Young Writers Fest (NZYWF)
aimed to honour the various ways we
arrive on the page, stage and screen:
the big feelings, the villages beside
us, the narratives passed and those
that will persist long after us.
My arrival at the page was in response
to immense grief. Seven years later,
writing is still one of the few practices
where I feel inextricably human —
loss, joy, fear, love, love, love. I invite
attendees to this year’s festival to
really lean into that last one! Loosen
your grip on the products of your
creative endeavours and celebrate the
messiness of the process, the unlikely
connections, and the mana in your own
narrative whakapapa.
Ngā mihi nui ki Ngāi Tahu for holding
each creative who has made this
kaupapa possible.
Enjoy the 2024 NZ Young Writers Fest!
Mauri ora,
Ruby Macomber (Rotuma, Ngāpuhi)
NAU MAI, HAERE MAI
FROM GUEST CURATOR
RUBY MACOMBER
1
ABOUT
This year the NZ Young Writers Fest
turns 10! Proudly produced by Dunedin
Fringe, NZ Young Writers Fest (NZYWF)
uplifts the voices of young writers aged
15-35 and celebrates a diverse range of
wordsmithing. The festival is the only
literary festival in Aotearoa focused
solely on young writers.
We invite you to take part: from youth
to art and literature loving adults, all are
welcome to celebrate Aotearoa’s next
generation of literary talent.
FESTIVAL
INFORMATION
All festival events are FREE, or you can
‘Pay What You Want’ when booking a
ticket to support the festival. All ‘Pay
What You Want’ tickets directly support
Dunedin Fringe to continue offering the
festival in future years, to pay our artists
fairly, and to keep NZYWF accessible and
affordable so everyone can take part.
Whatever ticket you choose, we highly
recommend booking. Festival venues
and workshops have limited spaces.
Events are tagged by event type:
Conversation; Workshop;
Performance; Walk and Talk; and
Conversation/Workshop if a discussion
is followed by a participatory workshop.
Some events will be recorded as podcasts.
You can access the podcasts on Otago
Access Radio’s website (oar.org.nz) or on
our NZYWF website, after the festival.
Heartfelt thanks to the UNESCO Dunedin
City of Literature and Otago Access Radio
for making these podcasts possible.
ACCESSIBILITY
Venue accessibility information is
listed in the Festival Venues section
and on our website. We welcome mask
wearing during all festival activities,
and if you’re feeling unwell, please stay
home. If you have other accessibility
requirements, please get in touch:
look@youngwritersfest.nz
PRIVACY
We’ll ask for your contact information
when you’re making bookings so we
can contact you if there are changes or
cancellations to the event you’ve booked.
Please note: events will be photographed
for festival marketing purposes.
Book at
youngwritersfest.nz
New Zealand Young Writers Festival is a
Dunedin Fringe Arts Trust project.
@NZYoungWritersFest
@nzyoungwritersfest
Phone: +64 3 477 3350
Email: look@youngwritersfest.nz
Website: youngwritersfest.nz
Follow us on:
FESTIVAL STAFF
Craig Birch-Morunga (Ngāpuhi,
Te Rarawa) - Videographer
Jessica Sutherland-Latton (Kāi Tahu,
Kāti Māmoe, Waitaha, Ngāti Porou,
Kāti Pākehā) - Kaupapa Māori Liaison
Kate Schrader - Co-Director
Katrina Thomson - Operations
Lil della Porta - Marketing &
Communications Manager
Meghan Ironmonger - Marketing
& Production Assistant
Ruby Macomber
(Rotuma, Ngāpuhi) - Guest Curator
Ruth Harvey - Co-Director
Sahara Pohatu-Trow
(Ngāti Tahu-Ngāti Whaoa, Ngāti
Kahungunu) - Production Manager
Festival branding and programme
designed by Annah Taggart,
Annah & Colour
MAILING LIST
Sign up to our mailing list at
dunedinfringe.nz/subscribe to hear more
about all Dunedin Fringe’s awesome
year-round programming!
Photo by Armstrong Photography
MAIN FESTIVAL
VENUES:
Te Whare o Rukutia
20 Princes St, Central Dunedin:
Wheelchair accessible; accessible,
gender-neutral bathrooms
Writers Lounge
@ Dunedin Community Gallery
26 Princes St, Central Dunedin:
Wheelchair accessible; accessible,
gender-neutral bathrooms
FESTIVAL VENUES
ADDITIONAL VENUES:
Blue Oyster Project Space
16 Dowling St, Central Dunedin:
Two steps up to the gallery, bathrooms
are not wheelchair accessible
Approx 4 minutes walk from main
festival venues
Dunedin Public Art Gallery
30 The Octagon, Central Dunedin:
Wheelchair accessible;
accessible bathrooms
Approx 1 minute walk from main
festival venues
Fringe HQ
19 George St, Central Dunedin:
Wheelchair accessible, gender-neutral
bathrooms are up steps
Approx 2 minutes walk from main
festival venues
New Athenaeum Theatre (the NAT)
23 The Octagon, Central Dunedin
(entrance down a corridor between
Thistle and The Craic):
Wheelchair accessible; accessible,
gender-neutral bathrooms
Approx 1 minute walk from main
festival venues
St Hilda’s Collegiate School Music Room
Access via 2 Cobden St, Central Dunedin:
Wheelchair accessible;
accessible bathrooms
Approx 18 minutes walk from main
festival venues via Filleul St
UNIVERSITY
BOOK SHOP STALL
A book stall featuring the
publications of this year’s
presenters – hosted by our
friends at University Book Shop
– will be open in Te Whare o
Rukutia throughout the festival.
Purchase a book and support
our talented young writers!
4
PROUD TO
SUPPORT THE
NEW ZEALAND
YOUNG WRITERS
FESTIVAL
P: +64 3 477 0752
E: southerncross@scenichotels.co.nz
www.scenichotelgroup.co.nz
‘We sweat and cry salt water so we know the ocean is really
in our blood’ (Teaiwa, 2017). Writers of Te Moana-Nui-a
Kiwa swim with their words; our narratives are embodied,
visceral and deeply intertwined with our senses of self. In
this panel discussion, 2024 Guest Curator Ruby Macomber
(Rotuma, Ngāpuhi) talks to Emele Ugavule (Sauniveiuto,
Serua, Fiji vasu Nukunonu, Tokelau kei Alele, Hihifo, Uvea),
Zech Soakai (Poutasi, Upolu, Samoa & Pangai, Ha'apai,
Tonga) and Stacey Kokaua (Ngāti Arerā (Rarotonga), Ngati
Pāmati, Pākehā) about what it means to be geographically
separated from the heartbeat of their whenua but to write
in proximity to whakapapa, and to (re)imagine the moana
through the beauty and complexity of contemporary
diasporic identities. They also explore creative techniques
that keep their bodies and narratives in conversation.
The 1980s saw young writers from Ōtepoti pioneer the
stylings that would earn them international recognition:
the Dunedin Sound. For The Remix, MC Tate Fountain
enlists a line up of poets and musicians – Eliana Gray, Isla
Huia (Te Āti Haunui a-Pāpārangi, Ngāti Uenuku), Molly
Crighton and Tawhai Huriwai (Tough Guy) (Ngāti Porou,
Ngā Puhi) – to respond to the scene and its legacy in
the same city in 2024: with reprises, reverb, and perhaps,
indeed, a remix.
Moana Speaks from the South
The Remix
6.30pm-7.30pm @ Te Whare o Rukutia
8.00pm-9.00pm @ Te Whare o Rukutia
Conversation
Performance
FRI 13 SEPT
EVENTS
The land holds our stories. In conversation with Tessa
Patrick (Kāi Tahu), writers Rauhina Scott-Fyfe (Kāi Tahu,
Kāti Māmoe, Ngāi Pākehā), Tōrea Scott-Fyfe (Kāi Tahu,
Kāti Mamoe, Waitaha), and Iona Winter (Waitaha, Kāi Tahu)
explore the vast and intergenerational perspectives of
this land, its history, and its future, and how writers —
regardless of their whakapapa — can delve deeper into
this whenua within their work. This kōrero is for anyone
seeking to understand a unique way of telling stories with
curiosity and fervent intent.
Join 2024 Young Writer in Residence Sherry Zhang (Chinese),
playwright/spoken-word poet Nathan Joe (Chinese), and
journalist/playwright Sam Brooks for a workshop on how
to write compelling, zingy, and revealing dialogue. By taking
a cross-disciplinary approach, this workshop is useful for
any writer looking to understand how to make spells and
dialogue come alive.
Maximum 16 participants, registrations essential
The NZYWF Young Writer in Residence is made possible by the
generous support of the Robert Lord Writers Cottage Trust
Want to level up your poetry performance? Or learn what
slam is all about? Join Amy Grace Laura from Motif Poetry
for a fast paced, creative, and playful writing workshop.
You’ll drain your pens with new writing exercises, refine
your performance skills, and take away tips for post-
workshop slam poetry crafting. Ideal for new writers and
poets competing in the Otago Poetry Slam tonight!
Maximum 20 participants, registrations essential
Presented in association with Motif Poetry | Ruri Tūtohu
Te Ao Kāi Tahu: writing the whenua and
whakapapa of Te Waipounamu
Spinning Yarns!
Slam Poetry Workshop
10.00am-11.00am @ Te Whare o Rukutia
10.00am-12.00pm @ Fringe HQ (19 George St)
10.00am-12.00pm @ Writers Lounge, Community Gallery
Workshop
Workshop
SAT 14 SEPT
EVENTS
Conversation
This participatory workshop explores the relational
aspects of the storying process. Emele Ugavule
(Sauniveiuto, Serua, Fiji vasu Nukunonu, Tokelau kei
Alele, Hihifo, Uvea), Makanaka Tuwe and Natasha Ratuva
(iTaukei) from the Studio Kiin collective will guide
attendees through an immersive experience. Incorporating
Indigenous-led movement practices and collective reading
and writing, Whose stori is it anyways? calls to the centre
the relationship writers have with the themes, characters,
communities, peoples and cultures they write about.
Maximum 16 participants, registrations essential
Whose stori is it anyways?
1.00pm-3.00pm @ Writers Lounge, Community Gallery
SAT 14 SEPT
Interviews, profiles, reviews, essays. At a grassroots level,
can these build communities? Join journalist Jamiema
Lorimer, Critic Te Ārohi editor Nina Brown and Pantograph
Punch kaiwāwahi and 2024 Young Writer in Residence
Sherry Zhang (Chinese) for a panel discussion on culture
journalism, its responsibility in representing communities,
and how meaning is transformed through different forms
and platforms. The panel is followed by a workshop to
develop your own culture pitch.
Leaning into the visceral, dynamic potential of multi-
medium expression for community-building and activism,
this short panel and collaborative workshop will equip
taiohi (young people) with skills to write and read for
the progression of movements and causes close to their
hearts. Join Guest Curator Ruby Macomber (Rotuma,
Ngāpuhi), Helena Mayer (German, Pākehā), Frances
Pavletich and Grace Cowley (Ngāpuhi) as they talk about
the movements close to them and how they engage with
and create texts to support their activism. Then break into
an ‘unconference’ style workshop to put the skills discussed
into practice by engaging with and creating pressing and
pertinent responses to texts.
Journalism as an Act of Community Building
Everything Pressing, Everything Pertinent:
Writing & Reading in Solidarity
2.30pm-4.30pm @ Te Whare o Rukutia
3.30pm-5.30pm @ Writers Lounge, Community Gallery
EVENTS
Workshop
Conversation | Workshop
Conversation | Workshop
SAT 14 SEPT
For the last two days, local high school poets, musicians
and dancers have been making cross-disciplinary
magic together with Show Ponies creator Freya Daly
Sadgrove. Come watch them put their poetic performance
experiments on stage for the first time!
Bringing this sell-out show to Ōtepoti for the first time,
Chinese-Kiwi writer Nathan Joe (2020 National Slam
Champ) has curated a celebration of BIPOC spoken word
artists. Dirty Passports features your favourite minorities
behaving badly, untwisting their tongues and shattering
stereotypes all for your displeasure.
Featuring David Eggleton (Rotuma, Tongana, Palagi),
Tough Guy (Ngāti Porou, Ngā Puhi), Ruby Macomber
(Rotuma, Ngāpuhi), and Rushi Vyas (South Asia, US).
Hosted by Nathan Joe (Chinese).
Since 2013, the Otago Poetry Slam has been an annual
highlight! This lively event brings together the most creative
poets in the region for a night of dynamic performances and
friendly competition with Motif Poetry's Amy Grace Laura
as MC. Whether you’re a seasoned poet or just starting out,
this slam offers a supportive atmosphere for everyone to
share their voice. Be a part of an unforgettable celebration
of poetry, creativity, and community!
Max. 12 competitors, to register email: amy@motifpoetry.co.nz
Presented in association with Motif Poetry | Ruri Tūtohu
Pony Camp Showcase
Dirty Passports
Otago Poetry Slam Champs 2024
7.00pm-7.45pm @ Te Whare o Rukutia
8.00pm-9.00pm @ Te Whare o Rukutia
7.00pm-9.00pm @ The New Athenaeum Theatre
EVENTS
Motif Poetry slam events are recommended for audiences
and poets aged 14+
Performance
Performance
Performance
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16