CRIPtic x London Writers Centre

D/deaf, disabled and neurodivergent, Partnership

CRIPtic Arts x Spread the Word collaboratively produce a range of activities including salons, a retreat and research for deaf and disabled writers. Our work together aims to offer a range of activities to support, develop and empower deaf and disabled writers. 

Started in June 2021, the CRIPtic x Spread the Word Salon is an inclusive online, free space facilitated and run by and for deaf and disabled writers, to create a community in which people can learn, have fun, and share their work. The latest Salon season starts in May 2023 and runs through to April 2024. Each Salon has  a workshop followed by a reading and Q&A, and an opportunity for participants to take part in an open mic. The Salon is open to deaf and disabled writers writing in any genre, new or more experienced and is free to attend. 

The 2023-24 Salon season is made possible through the support of Scope and Arts Council England.

Disabled Poets Prize

CRIPtic and Spread the Word also co-produce the Disabled Poets Prize. The 2024 winner will be announced at Deptford Literature Festival in an online event that is free to attend. The shortlist has been announced and shortlisted poems are available to read online.

2023 Salon Writers

  • Elspeth Wilson

    May 2023 Workshop Leader

    Elspeth Wilson

    May 2023 Workshop Leader

    Elspeth Wilson is a writer and poet who is interested in exploring the limitations and possibilities of the body through writing, as well as writing about joy and happiness from a marginalised perspective, which has led her to co-found the Writing Happiness project with Rachel Lewis. Her poems have been commended in Young Poets’ Network challenges and her prose has been shortlisted for Canongate’s Nan Shepherd prize and Penguin’s Write Now Editorial programme. Elspeth is currently working on her debut collection and also regularly facilitates accessible creative workshops. When she isn’t writing or reading, she can usually be found near the sea or spending time with her guinea pigs.

    www.elspethwilson.co.uk / Twitter / Instagram

    Image credit: Christy Ku

  • Joe Rizzo-Naudi

    June 2023 Workshop Leader

    Joe Rizzo-Naudi

    June 2023 Workshop Leader

    Joe Rizzo Naudi’s fiction, poetry and narrative non-fiction has been published on the Ink, Sweat and Tears webzine and in print by the Laurence Sterne Trust, Times of Malta and Sidekick Books. In 2022 he was awarded a London Writers Award by Spread The Word and won an Arts Council England grant to develop literature and performance projects exploring society, vision and mobility cane use. His writing, film and theatre work has been exhibited at the Wellcome Collection, the BFI Southbank, Brixton House, Vault Festival, Rich Mix, the ICA and the BBC. He has a degree in English Literature from King’s College London and an MA in Creative & Life Writing from Goldsmiths College. He was previously Editorial Assistant at Granta Books and currently works as a teacher, workshop facilitator and gallery mediator.

    Twitter / Instagram

  • Athena Stevens

    July 2023 Workshop Leader

    Athena Stevens

    July 2023 Workshop Leader

    Athena Stevens is an Olivier-nominated writer, performer, director and social activist. She specialises in telling true stories within a dramatic context and finding meaning in what may otherwise be dismissed as mundane detail. She is the writer in residence at the Finborough Theatre and Artistic Director of Aegis Productions.

    In 2018 Athena’s play SCHISM was nominated for an Off West End Award Best Female Performance and for an Olivier Award for Outstanding Achievement in an Affiliate Theatre. In 2020 the world premiere of her third play SCROUNGER opened the Finborough Theatre’s 40th Anniversary season. The production garnered Off West End Awards for Best New Play and Best Supporting Performance.

    www.antheastevens.com / Twitter

  • Hayleigh Barclay

    July 2023 Workshop Leader

    Hayleigh Barclay

    July 2023 Workshop Leader

    Hayleigh is a Scottish based writer. Having previously obtained a Masters in Creative Media Practises, she attended the University of Glasgow and gained a Doctorate of Fine Arts in Creative Writing. Published her gothic fantasy debut novel, Girl of the Ashes, in 2020. Co-edited anthology Stories from Home, during the pandemic for The Ambulance Staff Charity. Regular short story writer for Disability Horizons often using humour and satire to discuss disability issues. Currently represented by Long Road Talent for scriptwriting and is working on several scriptwriting projects.

    Twitter / Instagram

Access to Literature Research

Published in September 2021, Access to Literature presents the first national picture of the barriers deaf and disabled people experience in accessing the literature and publishing sectors as writers, creative producers and audience members.

Authored by Jamie Hale, Artistic Director of CRIPtic Arts, and Ruth Harrison, Director of Spread the Word, it is based on early stage research carried out by Spread the Word and CRIPtic Arts through focus groups and surveys with both individuals and organisations, alongside an online deaf and disabled writers’ retreat.

The report is for people working in the not for profit literature sector (funded and unfunded) and commercial literature organisations, publishing houses and presses, agents, funders and sponsors of literature and the arts, and non-disabled writers and creative producers.

We hope that it will start to build an evidence base to support change, opening up a wider conversation regarding access and inclusion in the not for profit literature and publishing sectors as well as with funders for more opportunities for deaf and disabled writers, creative producers and audiences.

Download and read the report: 

  • The Full Report can be downloaded as a .pdf and .doc.

  • The Executive Summary can be downloaded as a .pdf and .doc, and Easy Read format.

  • The Case Study can be downloaded as a .pdf and .doc.

The Access to Literature Report is also available in the following formats:

The Access to Literature research and report have been made possible through support using public funds by Arts Council England.

CRIPtic x London Writers Centre Retreats

CRIPtic x London Writers Centre have run two online Retreats for deaf and disabled writers. Free to participate in, each Retreat encouraged UK based deaf and/ or disabled writers to experiment and broaden their writing practice, get insight into the industry and become part of a writing community. Each Retreat includes creative exercises, workshops, readings, industry insights and a sharing event with access provisions embedded within it.

Our first Retreat, Experimental!, created as a response to the disproportionate impact of the pandemic on deaf and disabled communities, took place in September 2020 and was the UK’s first online writers retreat for deaf and disabled writers. Guest writers and speakers included: Raymond AntrobusElsa SjunnesonAnne FingerSara NovićKayla Whaley and Khairani Barokka.

The second CRIPtic x London Writers Centre Retreat took place in July 2021, focusing on poetry, fiction, and scriptwriting. Guest writers and speakers included: Matilda Ibini, Omikemi, Charlotte Heather,  Elle McNicoll, Nadia Nadarajah with industry insights from Vici Wreford-Sinnott, Artistic Director of Little Cog; Julie Farrell, a writer, critic and activist and Aliya Gulamani, Commissioning Editor at Unbound.

These retreats are funding dependent. There are no retreats currently programmed.

Quotation Mark Quotation Mark

“Last year’s retreat for deaf and disabled writers showed me so much about the barriers people are facing, and made me realise that we needed an ongoing commitment to supporting, developing, and showcasing deaf and disabled writers, which CRIPtic and I are proud to do alongside London Writers Centre.”

Jamie Hale, CRIPtic Arts

Salon Alumni: Workshop Leaders & Guests

  • Jamie Hale

    June 2021 Salon workshop leader and host

    Jamie Hale

    June 2021 Salon workshop leader and host

    Jamie Hale is a writer, performer and director who works across poetry, essay, script, and stage exploring the interactions between the body, impairment, nature and environment. They curate CRIPtic, a d/Deaf and disabled creative programme, and have had work published in Rialto, Magma, the Guardian, and their own pamphlet, Shield (Verve Press, 2021). They won Evening Standard Future Theatre Fund Director/Theatremaker of the Year award for their solo show NOT DYING, and their work with CRIPtic, which will feature as a showcase of d/Deaf and disabled artists at the Barbican in Autumn 2021.

    Jamie is leading the June Salon workshop.

  • Antonia King

    Antonia King

    Antonia Jade King is one of the hosts of Boomerang Club, and a previous Hammer & Tongue finalist. She has featured at Poetry and Shaah and Heaux Noire and was part of Apples and Snakes Writing Room programme in 2018. She has performed at numerous events including Love Supreme festival and Rallying Cry at Battersea Arts Centre. She was also a Barbican Young Poet and her debut pamphlet ‘She Too Is a Sailor’ is out with Bad Betty Press.

  • Jenny Alderton

    August 2021 Salon workshop leader

    Jenny Alderton

    August 2021 Salon workshop leader

    Jenny is a Welsh based artist and writer who often engages with themes around identity, expression, politics, and equality. Taking an interdisciplinary approach to creating; Jenny often combines poetry and spoken word with movement, video, and installation.

    Mainly writing poetry and short fiction, Jenny’s written work often engages with the everyday: using it as backdrop to comment on larger questions, thoughts, and contemporary political and societal issues.

    Jenny has previously taught creative writing and holds a degree in English Literature and Creative Writing.

  • Hayleigh Barclay

    August 2021 Salon reader

    Hayleigh Barclay

    August 2021 Salon reader

    Hayleigh Barclay is a Scottish based writer and disability rights campaigner. She obtained a Doctorate of Fine Arts in Creative Writing from the University of Glasgow in 2019. Her thesis researched 19th century Gothic vampire literature and involved writing her debut novel, Girl of the Ashes which was published in 2020. She writes short stories for the online magazine Disability Horizons. The stories blend dark humour and disabled characters to reinforce that disability needn’t be a taboo subject.

    During the pandemic she co-edited an anthology of stories/poems with proceeds going to The Ambulance Staff Charity. Avid scriptwriter. Teller of bad jokes!

  • Shannon Yee

    October 2021 Salon workshop leader

    Shannon Yee

    October 2021 Salon workshop leader

    Shannon Yee (Sickels) is an award-winning writer and producer. Her perspectives as an immigrant, ethnic minority, queer artist-parent with a disability living in NI are deeply embedded in her work. Shannon has received a number of awards and grants, including the ACNI Major Individual Artist Award (2017). Her Reassembled, Slightly Askew sonically immerses audiences in her autobiographical experience of nearly dying and subsequent acquired brain injury (www.reassembled.co.uk) , touring locally, nationally and internationally in arts festivals and medical training settings since 2015. Shannon’s published short stories are ‘The Brightening Up Side’( Belfast Stories; Doire Press, 2019), and ‘Thumbnails’ (Queer Love: An Irish Anthology; Southward, 2020). www.s-yee.co.uk

  • Tom Ryalls

    October 2021 Salon reader

    Tom Ryalls

    October 2021 Salon reader

    Tom is a writer, theatre maker and producer who focuses on changing who gets to imagine the future by revealing how the things we take for granted as fundamental in our lives, are actually just made up nonsense.

    His work has been seen at Theatre Royal Stratford East, Shoreditch Town Hall, Camden People’s Theatre, Pleasance, Theatre503 and he is currently developing a digital piece as part of CRIPtic 2021 at The Barbican.

    “Can You See Into a Black Hole?” is a solo show about his own experience of growing up with epilepsy. It was made in collaboration with his parents and follows the real story of his family. He wanted to be an astronaut but when he had his first seizure aged 8 and a black hole opened up inside his head – that had to change. Instead he goes on an epic adventure to understand the black hole in his brain. “Can You See Into a Black Hole?” is an imaginative attempt to remove epilepsy from the medical model and demonstrate that the thing that makes the condition difficult is not the seizures – but the way in which the world is built.

  • DL Williams

    December 2021 Salon workshop leader

  • Penny Pepper

    December 2021 Salon reader

    Penny Pepper

    December 2021 Salon reader

    Penny Pepper is an acclaimed wheelchair-using author, poet, performer & disabled activist. A genre-defying and versatile writer, her work focuses on the examination of difference, inequality and identity. She tells stories we haven’t heard, making others see life differently, always with humour and wisdom. Her champions include Jake Arnott, Margaret Drabble and Danuta Keene. Most recently she has been selected as a finalist in the prestigious international Hemingway Shorts 2021 Competition and her winning story will be published in their competition anthology.

    Penny published her groundbreaking memoir, First in The World Somewhere with Unbound and a poetry collection, Come Home Alive, with Burning Eye Books. She is now signed to The Good Literary Agency where she is represented by Abi Fellows. She has also been widely published including Mslexia, The Guardian, Byline Times amongst others.

    Image of Penny by Jonny Bosworth

  • Ayesha Chouglay

    February 2022 Salon workshop leader

    Ayesha Chouglay

    February 2022 Salon workshop leader

    Ayesha is a writer and multimedia artist who aims to use her artwork for political means, opening up safe spaces for conversation about difficult topics. Often her work draws on personal experience of disability. Her poetry has been shown in the ‘Song of Myself’ Poetry Jukebox at Belfast International Arts Festival, at ‘Mr W et al’, a celebratory event exploring art and disability in Hackney Wick, and in ‘Deaf Experience’, an online short film screening of films by deaf and hard-of-hearing creators, organised by The Film Bunch. She is currently writing her MA dissertation whilst working for Creative Estuary.

  • Sonny Nwachukwu

    February 2022 Salon Reader

    Sonny Nwachukwu

    February 2022 Salon Reader

    Sonny Nwachukwu is a writer, director, choreographer and performer based in London. His work is multi-disciplinary spanning across writing, poetry, dance, theatre and anything that lies beyond. His work primarily focuses on the African and Caribbean Diaspora.

    Sonny is a storyteller that incorporates dance and literature making his work relevant, unique, vibrant and thought-provoking. His background in Psychology informs much of his work and he is keen to tackle issues seen as taboo or ‘different’.

  • Inigo Purcell

    April 2022 Salon workshop leader

    Inigo Purcell

    April 2022 Salon workshop leader

  • Betty Doyle

    April 2022 Salon reader

    Betty Doyle

    April 2022 Salon reader

    Betty Doyle is a poet and student from Liverpool. Her poetry has been published in Cake, Brag, Smoke, Lunate, Re-Side, and Sink amongst others, and has been accepted for Agenda’s Young Poets series. She was longlisted for the Mslexia Women’s Poetry Prize 2018, judged by Carol Ann Duffy. From 2014-2016, she was poetry editor for Flash Journal Lancaster.

    She is currently studying for a PhD in Creative Writing at Manchester Metropolitan University, where she is researching infertility poetry. She has a physical disability called Arthrogryposis.

    Her debut poetry pamphlet, Girl Parts, will be published by Verve Poetry Press in March 2022. Twitter: betty_poet

  • Shahid Iqbal Khan

    June 2022 Salon workshop leader

    Shahid Iqbal Khan

    June 2022 Salon workshop leader

  • Kathryn O’Driscoll

    June 2022 Salon reader

    Kathryn O’Driscoll

    June 2022 Salon reader

    Kathryn O’Driscoll is the 2021 U.K. Slam Champion and World Slam Finalist. A spoken word poet and activist from Bath, England, she talks openly about mental health, neurodivergency, disability, LGBTQIA+ issues and joys, and survival in her poetry.

    She has performed at the Edinburgh Festival Fringe, Bath Festival, the Royal Albert Hall, Ledbury Poetry Festival, Cheltenham Literary Festival, and on BBC Radio Bristol. She was also one of the featured poets on the (BAFTA winning) Sky Arts spoken word TV show Life and Rhymes. Her debut collection ‘Cliff Notes’ was released by Verve Poetry Press in February.

  • Hannah Hodgson

    August 2022 Salon leader

    Hannah Hodgson

    August 2022 Salon leader

    Hannah Hodgson is a poet with a life limiting illness. Her debut collection is due from Seren in February 2022, and her New Poets Prize winning pamphlet is to be published by The Poetry Business in June 2022. Find more of her through her website, and Twitter.

    Hannah is the first prize winner in the Poetry and Political Language Challenge on Young Poets Network, in partnership with the Orwell Youth Prize. She is the second prize winner in the second Bloodaxe Archive challenge, about White Space, and is commended in the fourth Bloodaxe Archive challenge, Take Note. She is also the second prize winner in the 19-25 age category in the Turn Up the Volume challenge, and in the Keats challenge on Young Poets Network, part of The Poetry Society’s celebrations of Keats’s bicentenary in 2021.

    Hannah is additionally a winner in the 2016 Young Poets Network August Challenge #2, as well as a commended poet in 2016 August Challenges #1 and #4 and in August Challenge #1: Conversation Poems in 2021. She is also commended in Young Poets Network’s 10th anniversary challenge. She is a winner in the 2016 Behind the Curtain poetry challenge, in partnership with the V&A Museum, and the winner of the 2016 Even It Up Poetry Challenge in the 15-18 age category.

  • Sahera Khan

    August 2022 Salon reader

    Sahera Khan

    August 2022 Salon reader

    Sahera Khan (she/her) is a Muslim, Deaf and BSL user, Writer/Creator, Artist/Actress, Filmmaker & YouTuber.

    Sahera started writing to share her many creative stories with others. In 2010 she enrolled in a number of creative writing courses, then created her first blog for short pieces, before combining these into a book ‘My Creative Writing’ which she self published via Kindle. She has written nine ebooks. These covered a range of topics like children’s stories, fiction and nonfiction.

    She has written several short screenplays for screen and theatre scripts, including a short film called ‘He Stood Me Up’ which was commissioned by BSL Zone in 2014 and a short play called ‘Hope for Ishq’, performed by Deafinitely Theatre in 2016.

    Her poem is Why Together? published Together! 2020 Poetry Anthology 2020.

    She wrote a short play No Words (2021) part of a research and development project which was funded by Deafinitely Theatre. The project is about a Deaf woman ‘Nice’, she was arrested and charged for ABH (Actual Bodily Harm). She was imprisoned for six months. She reveals the truth behind her journey in the justice system.

    Her aim is to continuing writing ‘No Words’ to develop it into a full-length play and publish playtext.

    At present she is writing and illustrating two new books: ‘Basic Islamic Signs with Illustrations’ and a series of short stories about deaf characters. This will be the first time she has published a book specifically with deaf characters.

    Her first piece of journal published the book ‘Maternal Journal: A creative guide to journaling through pregnancy, birth and beyond’ by Laura Godfrey-Isaacs and Samantha McGowan, printed by Pinter & Martin (2021).

    Also her poem ‘My Glow’ published What Meets the Eye? The Deaf Perspective book by Arachne Press (2021).

  • Emily Howlett

    October 2022 Workshop leader

    Emily Howlett

    October 2022 Workshop leader

  • Khairani Barokka

    December 2022 Salon leader and reader

    Khairani Barokka

    December 2022 Salon leader and reader

  • Emily Brenchi

    October 2022 Salon reader

    Emily Brenchi

    October 2022 Salon reader