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2016 has been a year of political surprises which have been difficult to keep up with, however, change is always happening and this inevitably offers new landscapes for artistic creativity. At BST we have always been open to change and we are guided by artists' own reflections on events and the directions they choose to take. The Journal, as usual, welcomes international readership and contributions from artists and academics from all over the world. We remain committed to being an open access publication and welcome innovation and experimentation in the Arts, in whatever form it takes or processes from which it arises. We invite readers to be stimulated by the current issue and hope it encourages future contributions that will surprise and perhaps even lead to the unexpected in our fields of research and creativity. The Editors |
EDITORS SUE BROADHURST, Brunel University BARRY EDWARDS, Director Optik SUB EDITOR IMOGENE NEWLAND EDITORIAL BOARD CAMILLE BAKER, University for the Creative Arts THOMAS BETTERIDGE, Brunel University JOHANNES BIRRINGER, Brunel University CAROL BROWN, University of Auckland MARIA CHATZICHRISTODOULOU (aka MARIA X) - London South Bank University FELICITY COLMAN, University of Kingston ELENA COLOGNI, University of Cambridge JAMES G. R. CRONIN, University College Cork DIANA DAMIAN, Royal Central School of Speech and Drama GLENN D'CRUZ, Deakin University, Australia STEVE DIXON, LASALLE College of the Arts, Singapore GABRIELLA GIANNACHI, University of Exeter EMMANOUIL KANELLOS, University of Greenwich PETRA KUPPERS, University of Michigan, US JO MACHON, University of Middlesex JOHN MATTIAS, University of Plymouth DAVID OSBON, University of West London DANIEL PLOEGER, Royal Central School of Speech and Drama SITA POPAT, University of Leeds FRANZISKA SCHRODER, Queen's University Belfast STELARC, Curtin University, Western Australia OLU TAIWO, Univeristy of Winchester FIONA TEMPLETON, Brunel University TRACEY WARR, Independent Writer WEBMASTER STEVEN SAMS COVER DESIGN Christian Riegel, Katherine M. Robinson and Ashley Herman: ‘Shakespeare Sonnet using heat map data coded in Processing 2 to represent focus areas virtually by word size’. BST Journal acknowledges financial support from the School of Arts Brunel University. An online search facility is available at EBSCO Publishing www.ebscohost.com. There is no subscription charge for online access to the journal. |