Taking photos, mapping, collecting stories about named student flats of #Dunedin, NZ. A @sarahlibrarina project. Book and walking tour. #scarfieflats#flatnames
Need a copy of Scarfie Flats? You can buy direct from me - $25 plus postage (free delivery in central Dunedin). Email me on [email protected] with your address #scarfieflats#flatnames
Our identity in place - there’s a very geographical underpinning to our ikoa Māori and tohu, launched early this morning on our Ōtepoti campus. 🤗🤗
https://t.co/nhYp1j2rlT
Applications for the 2025 Judith Binney Fellowships and Writing Awards will open on 13 May 2024.
If you are interested in applying please visit https://t.co/IApvqupGyG for further information about the Fellowships and Awards.
Applications close at 5pm on 5 July 2024.
📢 CALL FOR SUBS NOW OPEN! 📢 you are here: the journal of creative geography is accepting subs for our 2023 issue: COUNTER/CARTOGRAPHIES until 1/15. We take submissions in any creative genre! See the full call here: (https://t.co/EjFliImHwH) or here (https://t.co/FXausI7Ext).
@AndrewPaulWood@SarahLibrarina I’d say the “horror flat” and tenants are in the minority. One horror flat that features in ‘Scarfie Flats of Dunedin’ was the Shitshow Chateau, taken on in all it’s depravity by a group of students who sought to do it up and make it warm and habitable.
Dear media people, if you really are interested in scummy Dunedin flats, @SarahLibrarina wrote an entire book about Scarfie flats and their picturesque names.
@RNZSunday@katehymes It was really interesting to hear you interviewed why people name inanimate objects @katehymes. I’ve a particular interest in named houses and more specifically the ephemeral names students give their flats in Dunedin, New Zealand.