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Works by Brayden Fraser

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Museum of Me

Museum of Me

The Date – Script

The Date is a gay romantic short film script created in my screenplay Studio Specialisation class. It was written and edited in a 6-week deadline for an assignment. It follows protagonist Dan on a night that could change the rest of his life. The piece bears lots of sentimental value, considering the content and the sparking of my interest in the screenplay format.

Full version : https://braydenfraser.wordpress.com/2020/08/17/script-2-th e-date-screenplay-studio-specialisation-assignment/

Passenger – Short Story

This piece was inspired by the film Urban Legend and the Killer in the Backseat legend. The Cask of Amontillado, by Edgar Allen Poe, and, The Landlady, by Ronald Dahl, inspired this piece by holding unease and suspense and using a shock ending, respectively. Passenger explores aspects of horror and the uncanny which interested me from the course. There was a 1,500-word limit which also motivated me to explore something in detail in an alternative way.

Full version : https://braydenfraser.wordpress.com/2019/12/15/short-stor y-4-passenger-short-story-writing-assignment/

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The Broken Stars – Short Story

The Broken Stars was a scrapped short story for a creative writing assignment which later was used to write an exegetical essay on. The short story was prompted by the idea of ‘Two people meet, and tragedy befalls one of them.’ The story holds a lot of sentimental value, as it’s the first scrapped piece I’ve salvaged and built on instead of discarding. The reason why I decided to salvage the piece was for its ‘poetic’-ness, the strong exploration of themes, and the dramatic ending.

Full version : https://braydenfraser.wordpress.com/2019/11/06/short-story3-the-broken-stars-rmit-bachelors-in-creative-writing-piece/

Angie Geary

Angie is a mid-fat trans boy currently residing on Kaurna Land. Their creative practice consists of machine knitted, woven and experimental textiles that explore the utilisation of repurposed materials. Their surface design is a form of therapy focusing on fat acceptance. Angie’s work explores the sensorial qualities of textiles that can create psychological and physical benefits for the user.

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