~ Gina Frampton Writing Comes Alive: Writing Plain English
For her work in weaving a tale of generational trauma told with "deadly Blak" humour Melissa Lucashenko has won Australia's most prestigious literary award
Too Much Lip is driven by personal experience, historical injustice, anger and what in indigenous vernacular could be described as 'deadly Blak' humour
Top literary award terrifying
Lucashenko wins 2019 Miles Franklin for 'Too Much Lip'
Books+Publishing
I will be waching people especially writers how they use phones from now on ...
Trauma and humour make a winning combination in Miles Franklin
(Photo: Miles Franklin / Twitter
Established in 1957 by author Stella Miles Franklin, the
Miles Franklin award
is one of the prestigious literary prizes in
Australia
. The annual prize is given 'to a novel which is of the highest literary merit and presents Australian life in any of its phases,' reads a statement on their official website. Author
Melissa Lucashenko
won the 2019 Miles Franklin award for her book '
Too Much Lip
' on July 30.
Announcing the news, Miles Franklin awards tweeted:
A huge congratulations to Melissa Lucashenko who's novel 'Too Much Lip' published by @UQPbooks has been awarded the 2019 Miles Franklin Literary Award. #MFLA2019 #MilesFranklinsupported by @CopyrightAgency#CulturalFund @perpetual_ltd@abcnewspic.twitter.com/ld0bupDcVU— MilesFranklin (@_milesfranklin) July 30, 2019
How You Move Your Phone Can Reveal Insights Into Your Personality, Creepy Study Finds - Science Alert – “It may sound strange at first, but a team of researchers in Australia has come up with a method to predict your personality traits using just the accelerometer in your phone. Well, that and your call and messaging activity logs. Also, the system works for some traits better than others. But it’s an interesting take on how we may find connections through such seemingly unrelated things. There’s a wealth of previous research investigating how different aspects of your smartphone and social media use – such as your language in messages, how you style your Facebook profile, or how much physical activity you do – can be used to predict your personality traits.
“Activity like how quickly or how far we walk, or when we pick up our phones up during the night, often follows patterns and these patterns say a lot about our personality type,” said one of the team, computer scientist Flora Salim from RMIT University in Australia. In this case, we start at the Big Five personality traits. These have been used in psychology since the 1980’s to help classify five dominant parts of our personalities…” (The study has been published in Computer – Predicting Personality Traits From Physical Activity Intensity [paywall])