Writers Immersion and Cultural Exchange (WrICE) — Sing Lit Station
A Platform Where Writers And Readers Meet
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Writers Immersion and Cultural Exchange (WrICE)

Bringing together writers from the Asia-Pacific, in partnership with RMIT University.

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Our Latest WrICE Update

Writers Immersion and Cultural Exchange (WrICE) was a partnership between SLS and RMIT University that brought together writers in the Asia-Pacific region for face-to-face collaborative residencies.

Between 2020 and 2022, we took on the challenge of a fully-digital residency while keeping to the heart of the programme: the simple notion that writers can benefit from stepping outside their solo writing journeys to connect with other writers of different cultures and backgrounds.

Our digital residencies were facilitated by the following esteemed writers and academics: Bernice Chauly (MY), Sreedhevi Iyer (AU), Alvin Pang (SG) and David Carlin (AU) in 2020; Francesca Rendle-Short (AU) and Alvin Pang (SG) in 2021. In 2022, our facilitators are Charlene Shepherdson (SG) and Michelle Aung Thin (AU).


Our 2022 Fellows

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About WrICE

WrICE was founded in 2013 by Associate Professor Francesca Rendle-Short and Professor David Carlin of RMIT University in Melbourne, and in the past seven years has brought together an Asia-Pacific community of writers, sparking networks and connections and raising the professional profile of writers across the region. WrICE has travelled to Indonesia, the Philippines, China, Vietnam, Malaysia and Singapore, and brought its writers around the world from the Melbourne Writers Festival to the Jakarta Post Writers Series to the Singapore Writers Festival. To find out more about WrICE’s history, please refer to this archived site while we continue renovations.

WrICE provides a solid framework for intercultural and intergenerational dialogue—the exchange and furthering of knowledge, creativity, skills and cultural perspectives—that is underpinned by principles of mutual respect and a desire for genuine reciprocity. By supporting the development of individual practice in a collaborative way, WrICE not only contributes to individual creativity but evolves practice across the sector. Through the work of individuals, WrICE has an influence on broader societal perspectives, changing the stories we tell and listen to.

From its founding in 2013 through to 2018, WrICE was delivered through a partnership between RMIT University and The Copyright Agency. Since 2020, Sing Lit Station (SLS) has stepped in to fund the programme, and co-organise it with RMIT as part of SLS’ mission to develop writing and publishing initiatives in ASEAN and the Asia Pacific, with the support of the National Arts Council, Singapore. SLS seeks to carry on the spirit of building bridges across the numerous cultures of the Asia-Pacific, and looks forward to future partnerships across the region to continue the face-to-face residency in the years to come.

To find out more about WrICE, please drop an email to contact@singlitstation.com.