Writing Speculative Fiction as a form of Rebellion

workshops

Speculative fiction work such as fantasy, dystopias, and horror have always been genres that allow a space for writers to discuss and critique real world issues including sexism, racism, and class disparity – but how do you write with these ideas in mind?

TUESDAY 24TH MARCH

7:00PM – 9:00PM

pay what you can

Writing Speculative Fiction as a form of Rebellion is a workshop designed for emerging fiction writers to explore real world issues such as sexism, racism, class disparity, religious persecution, and propaganda in a safe and creative environment.

Across the two-hour session we will first explore how some of the greats have accomplished discussing and critiquing issues in their own work, pulling on examples such as class disparity and capitalism in The Hunger Games, dehumanization in Tender is the Flesh, sexism and propaganda in The Grace Year, and racism in Eragon. We will also discuss how and when to tell a story that draws upon lived experience.

After we will explore how to create rich, livedin worlds and brainstorm our own ideas exploring real life societal issues. At the end there will be time to write and the opportunity to share.

Mikala Smee is currently working on what she hopes will be her debut novel, with an emphasis on speculative fiction as a form of rebellion. She has a BA from the University of Queensland majoring in Criminology and Writing. In 2025 she was a winner of the Young Poets Network Breaking the Rules Challenge and commended in the Poetry Society x Modern Poetry in Translation Challenge. She was awarded a bursary to attend the 2024 John Hewitt International Summer School and in 2023 was awarded a place in the Express Media Fiction Toolkit program. Her work includes poetry and short stories which have been published in numerous magazines.

Age 16+.

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