Axon: Creative Explorations, the journal of the Centre for Creative and Cultural Research at the University of Canberra, is named for the axon, the primary point of transmission within the nervous system and the means of communication between neurons.
Axon: Creative Explorations is an international, open access, peer reviewed journal that publishes works that express or are about creativity and the creative process, including:
- the methods and techniques of artists and other creative professionals
- approaches to creative-led research and the theorisation of creative practice
- the ways in which creative works are made and function
- creative interventions and explorations of contemporary matters of concern
- poetics and poetry, and
- the cultural contexts and theoretical frameworks informing creative practice.
NB: Axon does not accept unsolicited poetry, and the editors will not read unsolicited poems.
Axon publishes two general issues a year, and occasional special or capsule issues.
2025 saw the 80th anniversary of the first use of atomic weapons in war, alongside a plethora of expressions of nuclear anxiety, and of creative responses to past and current atomic threats. Both research and media commentary indicate that nuclear anxiety—a term first coined by Margaret Mead as the ‘fear of a nuclear war and its consequences’—is permeating creative, academic and popular literature and the arts. Like a phoenix, it continually re-emerges into popular, literary and artistic consciousness, rising with new threats from geopolitical tensions and the proliferation of nuclear weapons.
A number of key reports, such as the World Humanities Report, as well as testimonies from hibakusha (atomic bomb survivors), point to the need for humanities and creative arts insights and responses to help address the problems of both nuclear proliferation, and poor information and understanding about the extent of atomic risk. This demonstrates the need for ongoing conversations in the Arts and Humanities about nuclear disarmament and the emotional scars left by past conflicts.
In this context, Axon: Creative Explorations invites contributions that:
- explore the ‘unfinished business’ of the atomic bomb
- connect the earlier creative work of hibakusha to contemporary issues and literatures
- rethink/reframe nuclear war and nuclear proliferation
- examine what, or how, creative interpretations of the atomic legacy may contribute to broader social understandings
- contribute new understandings of the role of creative work in responding to social anxieties about nuclear escalation and atomic warfare
- address the tension that exists in both the spoken and the unspoken, the silences and the noise, about atomic power
- utilise artistic mediums to convey personal and collective responses to the atomic bomb and its legacy
- inspire innovative storytelling that challenges conventional narratives about nuclear war and promotes dialogue through creative forms
Submit:
- essays (standard or lyric) of up to 7000 words
- photo essays of up to 12 images, plus a commentary of 500–1000 words
- poems: maximum of 6, plus a commentary of 500–1000 words
(Please do not submit poems or photos without a commentary or other framing document)
In his short story ‘See the moon’ (New Yorker 12/3/1966) – a story that meanders through a lucky dip barrel of images and ideas – Donald Barthelme’s narrator twice asserts: ‘Fragments are the only forms I trust.’
Fragments. Think Walter Benjamin’s Arcades Project; Immanuel Kant’s Notes and Fragments, Antigone Kefala’s Fragments. Think almost anything written by WG Sebald; think what is left of Sappho’s poetry, or the many collected fragments of Sanskrit Buddhist writings, or the fragments of ancient civilisations unearthed by archaeologists working across the globe. Think of the anonymous shopping list you found in a trolley; your own brief notes scrawled in haste; the sketches in your artist journal. Think the smudged graffiti on the wall; or the sentence fragments that make up so much conversation.
For the first issue of Axon: Creative Explorations in 2026, we invite scholarly essays, photo essays, or lyric essays that reflect on the fragment.
We would love to see your responses to this provocation.
Submit, by 31 January 2026:
- essays (standard or lyric) of up to 7000 words
- photo essays of up to 12 images, plus a commentary of max 1000 words
- poems: maximum of 6, plus a commentary of up to max 1000 words
We will also consider essays that address the general concerns of creative exploration. Please feel free to contact us at axon@canberra.edu.au with specific queries.
Submissions are invited on a continuing basis to Axon: Creative Explorations.
What to submit:
Submissions of articles, essays, interviews, papers and photo essays are welcome. The editors also welcome submission of creative work, other than poems, when accompanied by a 250-word statement that indicates the research aspects of the creative piece. Expected length of submissions is between 500 and 6,000 words, as appropriate to the form.
- All poetry published in Axon will be solicited by the journal’s editors. Unsolicited contributions of poetry will not be read or acknowledged.
How to submit:
• Visit the journal website at http://axonjournal.com.au, and acquaint yourself with the focus and content of previous issues;
• Read information about the journal and the submission and review process at http://axonjournal.com.au/contribute;
• Upload your submission, along with an abstract (max 200 words), a biographical note (max 150 words), your institutional affiliation (if relevant), up to 5 keywords and, for photo essays and other creative work, a 250-word research statement.
Submissions should be between 500 and 6,000 words, depending on the nature of the submission.
Please contact the editors with any queries about length, form and content.