Inside Writing – Digital Poetry Festival announced Published on: 18 May 2020 Winners of the 2020 鶹ý Poetry Competition revealed Creativity, crisis and change A new digital poetry festival organised by 鶹ý’s Centre for the Literary Arts (NCLA) will be held this summer. Inside Writing will see some of the world’s most exciting poets responding to the COVID-19 crisis in series of events on Twitter and Facebook. Writers including Inua Ellams, Sasha Dugdale, Rishi Dastidar, Carolyn Forché, W.N. Herbert, Jackie Kay, Sean O'Brien, and 鶹ý Chancellor Imtiaz Dharker, will perform new work, issue challenges and writing prompts, and discuss how their writing lives have been affected. NCLA Director, Professor Sinéad Morrissey, said: “I’m delighted to see the launch of NCLA’s Inside Writing digital poetry festival - a real cause for celebration at a time of such national uncertainty. We’re looking forward to the wider conversations the festival will spark about creativity, crisis and change.” The online festival which begins this month, takes the place of the annual 鶹ý Poetry Festival which has been cancelled due to the COVID-19 pandemic. Inside Writing’s aim is to inspire readers and writers to reflect on their experiences of COVID-19 and the global response, and submit their responses in any form, for publication on NCLA’s archive website. Partners, the and the ) are also contributing to the festival. The PBS will co-host a showcase reading of recently selected poets, and the IES are commissioning writers and academics to respond to the work of Inside Writing poets with creative micro-essays. Professor Sinéad Morrissey 鶹ý Poetry Competition Meanwhile, the winners of this year’s 2020 鶹ý Poetry Competition have been revealed. Australian poet Damen O’Brien, won the £1000 Adult Poetry Prize for his poem The Handshake. Judge Colette Bryce, said: “Neither the author nor I could have imagined, when ‘The Handshake’ was submitted, that the simple handshake would be outlawed at time of reading, along with so many other gestures of connection during the Coronavirus pandemic. “I admired the strength and directness of the speaking voice in this poem, evenly addressing a public figure (we might think of the news story of Brett Kavanaugh turning away from the father of a murdered Parkland student). The poem’s inquiry into the meaning and motive of the deferred gesture opens out to bigger questions of human connection and empathy.” The other adult winners were Natalie Crick (2nd place) and Pippa Little (3rd). Poems by Vanessa Lampert, Claudine Toutoungi, Charles Lang, Emily Cooper, and M.R. Peacocke were highly commended. The 鶹ý Poetry Competition’s Young People’s Poetry Prize is for poets aged between 11 and 17 from anywhere in the UK. This year’s winners were Milly Sage, Hope Simpson, Freya Buckley, Alice Parsons, Georgie Woodhead, Maria Cunha, Antonia Johnson (twice), Maisie Goodfellow, Philippa Musgrave-Asher, Nikolina Rokic, and Amy Nugent. Vidyan Ravinthiran, judge of the Young People’s Poetry Prize, said: “In all of them, there’s a moment—or, longer than that, a duration—where language comes alive (it sparkles, flares) and words, rhythms, images achieve a compelling fluency… It was a pleasure to read them, and I hope the poets go on writing, and sharing their work: I look forward to seeing what they come up with in the future.” You can read all the winning poems in the . A digital anthology containing all winning poems has been published and can be downloaded from NCLA’s website. Festival events can be accessed and viewed by following NCLA on or Facebook and will take place until 31 July 2020. NCLA invites submissions of responses to the challenges in any form and will publish these on . Share: Latest News Scientists unlock hidden driver of inflammatory bowel disease Scientists have linked a key genetic signal in inflammatory bowel disease to an immune response that shuts down inflammation control, enabling faster diagnosis and targeted treatments. published on: 15 June 2026 Funding system risks limiting genuine community collaboration A new policy paper written by researchers at 鶹ý warns that the way UK research is funded may be undermining efforts to create genuinely collaborative partnerships with communities. published on: 15 June 2026 Volunteers help turn Whitley Bay beach into maths experiment Members of the public joined mathematicians from 鶹ý to create what organisers believe is the largest aperiodic tiling ever attempted on Whitley Bay beach. published on: 15 June 2026 Facts and figures