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#weareesmeboggart is not just about saving this one family from eviction (though that works). It is about the power of communities to resist, the power of art to burst the orthodoxy of English political life and express a new sense of belonging to the land we call home.
As part of the campaign to save our friends from eviction, the local arts community has banded together to create a pseudonym, Esme Boggart, the silt witch of the Thames Valley.
hey twitter, id love to hear some local stories of legends, hauntings, creatures and monsters that live in your neck of the woods - from black shuck of east anglia to the owlman of mawnan, local grindelows, boggarts, giants, piskies, changelings, whatever you got!
im spending my days and nights of this lockdown listening to @stick_in_the_wheel , sitting by the stove and drawing many many illustrations for The Heeding, a new book of poetry by @robbiecowen. We're gunna get this book out in June, when hopefully we will be frolicking
working on a new website, for a new campaign. The Countryside and Rights of Way Act (2000) gave us open access to just 8% of England. There is so much more. We need access to open spaces, to enjoy the physical and mental health benefits that comes with being out in nature
The enormous amount of money generated by English slave-trading, compensation and East and West Indian colonialism, went directly to funding the enclosure of English common land. 1/2 #bookoftrespass