![]() By submitting your poem you grant us permission to include it in our printed zine and / or feature it on our website or social media accounts.V) A brief summary of how your piece fits the theme 'Invitation to Love'. These will be published alongside your poem and credit. Iv) Your social handle and a short bio (no more than 50 words). Ii) Your phone number (or that of a parent or carer if you are under 18). Please email your poem(s) as a Word document or PDF (one per page) to Do not include your name or provide any other form of identification on your poem(s).Work submitted should not have been previously published nor have won a prize in another competition.Maximum submission of three poems per person.The competition is open to poets of any nationality writing in English.The competition judges are Emma Dakeyne and Katharine Perry.Ĭlosing date: Midnight (on a moonless night) TUESDAY 30 NOVEMBER 2021 Submission details Shortlisted poems will be published in our 3rd zine Invitation to Love, released in print for Valentine’s Day, and a portion of sales will be donated to The David Lynch Foundation.Īll shortlisted poets will be invited to the launch event, either face-to-face or via Zoom / Instagram Live. Winner will receive £75 + a prize certificate + an invitation to read at our launch eventģ runners-up will receive £25 + a prize certificate + an invitation to read at our launch event ![]() Your poems can be wild at heart and weird on top, describe a dangerous desire for donuts, dedicated to the beautiful girl across the hall, a celebration of our flesh world, or a simple salute to red lips, green lawns and blue velvet. We’re looking for poems up to 40 lines on the theme of Invitation to Love, inspired by the dramatic soap opera show-within-a-show featured on David Lynch’s and Mark Frost’s ‘Twin Peaks’. Send us feedback about these examples.For the first time, we’re opening submissions for this issue as a competition. ![]() These examples are programmatically compiled from various online sources to illustrate current usage of the word 'automaton.' Any opinions expressed in the examples do not represent those of Merriam-Webster or its editors. John Horgan, Scientific American, 16 June 2021 Upgrade points unlock fighting combos and improve your automaton. Alex Jung, Vulture, 7 July 2021 Like the incompleteness theorem of Gödel, and like the Game of Life, a cellular automaton invented by mathematician John Conway, Penrose tiles suggest that even a universe based on simple rules can generate infinite, unpredictable complexity. 2021 Blitz, a Parisian automaton from 1850 and a family heirloom. ![]() Journe x Francis Ford Coppola, FFC Blue, a wristwatch that tells time via an automaton in the shape of a blue hand. 2021 This year’s most striking example is the F.P. The Physics Arxiv Blog, Discover Magazine, 31 Mar. 2022 In the late 1960s, the English mathematician John Conway began experimenting with a strange form of computer known as a cellular automaton. Todd Plummer, Condé Nast Traveler, 7 Sep. 2021 The hotel's resident automaton, MOBI, greets guests, escorts them to their rooms, and even delivers small amenities from a stowage compartment in its belly, providing service with a (digital) smile. ![]() 2023 Every parent has at times felt like an automaton. Recent Examples on the Web The Voyager Skeleton is by comparison, monochromatic and less theatrical-there are no automatons or chimes. ![]()
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