Partnerships

Find out about the organisations we work with and the exciting work we've done with them.

  • Barque Press

    Barque Press was founded by Andrea Brady and Keston Sutherland in 1995. Since then, they have published over 40 chapbooks and six perfect bound books. Barque has published poets from the UK, US, France and Canada.

    In addition to these text-based publications, Barque has produced four audio recordings, which include spoken word performances by a variety of artists alongside improvisational music. These are an offshoot of their magazine, Quid, which regularly includes poetry, prose, and critical essays. Formerly print-based, the magazine is now distributed gratis as Adobe Acrobat files from their website.

    Visit the Barque Press website

  • Oxford Literary Review

    Oxford Literary Review (co-edited by Nicholas Royle) devotes itself to outstanding writing in deconstruction, literary theory, psychoanalytic theory, political theory and related forms of exploratory thought. Founded in 1977 it remains responsive to new concerns and committed to patient, inventive reading as the wellspring of critical research. It has published work by many trailblazing thinkers and seeks to take forward the movement of deconstructive thought in the face of as many forms and institutions as possible.

    The journal publishes both general issues and special issues, each of the latter featuring a provocative theme (e.g. ‘The Word of War’, ‘Telepathies,’ or ‘Disastrous Blanchot’). It invites relevant contributions across a wide range of intellectual disciplines on issues and writers belonging to or engaging the work of deconstructive thinking (such as Derrida, Heidegger, Blanchot, Levinas, Irigaray, and others).

    Visit the Oxford Literary Review website

  • Textual Practice

    Since its launch in 1987, Textual Practice (edited by Peter Boxall) has been Britain’s principal international journal of radical literary studies, continually pressing theory into new engagements. Today, as customary relations among disciplines and media are questioned and transformed, Textual Practice works at the turning points of theory with politics, history and texts. It is intrigued by the processes through which hitherto marginal cultures of ethnicity and sexuality are becoming conceptually central, and by the consequences of these diverse disturbances for educational and cultural institutions.

    Visit the Textual Practice website

    Textual Practice contains some of the most path-breaking, adventurous critical writing currently to be found in Britain.”TERRY EAGLETON
    University of Manchester