The Creative Resistance Podcast
In this episode of The Creative Resistance Podcast, Scott Cassidy sits down with award-winning poet and writer Victoria McNulty. From a deep dive into the creative roots of her Glasgow upbringing to her fierce critique of the Robert Burns legacy, Victoria discusses why working-class stories are a form of social archive and why true grassroots art is the ultimate weapon against gentrification. She also shares a brand new poem - Nettles - that is jaw-droppingly brilliant. In This Episode, We Discuss: The Creative Origin Story: How 60s records, Britpop, and The Streets shaped her poetic voice. The "Irish-Not-Irish" Experience: Exploring the immigrant identity through the lens of The Pogues and folk music. Art as Social Archive: Why Victoria believes working-class art should be told by the community, not just "preserved" by outsiders. The Ghost of Robert Burns: A candid look at the censorship and backlash Victoria faced for challenging the "Weinsteinian" aspects of Scotland’s national bard. Urban Decay & Policy: The reality of Glasgow’s changing landscape, from the loss of historic buildings to the rise of "student flat" capitalism. Key Quotes: "I always thought... it’s about writing stories that people can relate to. There’s not much in the way of working-class art going on in Scotland, and if there is, you’ve got to fit into a certain bracket." "I’ve never been censored more in Scotland than I have for criticising Robert Burns." Bio: Victoria McNulty is an award winning poet, writer and performer from the East End of Glasgow. Her poetry collection Confessionals and Exiles have been published by Speculative Books. Confessionals was developed into a spoken word theatre show by Sonnet Youth and toured nationally to critical acclaim, while Exiles was developed into a feature theatre film directed by David Hayman JR and Kevin P Gilday. Work from the latter won the 2022 Annual John Byrne award. Victoria is the former Paisley Book Festival Writer in Residence, a former Artist in Residence with Gal Gael as part of the Dandelion Festival 2022 and participant in Edinburgh Book Festival's Outriders Project 2023. Her work has been featured in publications and events by the BBC 6 Music Festival, the Glasgow Story Telling Festival, Nutmeg, Feile and Phobail (Belfast), Edinburgh Festival, the James Connolly Festival (Dublin) and Neu Reekie! She was named Writer o the Year at the 2021 Scots Language Awards and shortlisted with commendations at the prestigious Anne Brown Award at Wigtown Book Festival 2023. She currently works in community outreach for the Scottish Poetry Library. Resources & People Mentioned: Poetry Collections: Confessionals and Exiles (Speculative Books). Influences: Seamus Heaney, Shane McGowan (The Pogues), Mike Skinner (The Streets), and Joe Strummer. Community Projects: Cranhill Arts, GalGael, and the Scottish Poetry Library. Writers/Artists: Alan Bissett, Liz Lochhead, Graham Armstrong, and Katherine Joseph. Connect with Victoria: Instagram: @victoriamcnultypoet [https://www.google.com/search?q=https://www.instagram.com/victoriamcnultypoet] Substack: victoriamcnulty.substack.com [http://victoriamcnulty.substack.com] Support The Creative Resistance: If you enjoyed this episode, please subscribe and leave a review. Your support helps us amplify voices that challenge the status quo. This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit thecreativeresistancepodcast.substack.com [https://thecreativeresistancepodcast.substack.com?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_1]
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