‘I am what Robert Park, an American sociologist would have described as a Marginal Person. Somebody who lives in two worlds, but who is more or less a stranger in both.’ Melanie Cheng on liminality, first read at the launch of LIMINAL issue #1.
Read More‘Depending on who you talk to, the d-word can be either dreaded, detested, or divine. It’s a word that, when laundered through the spin-cycle of contemporary culture, has been wrung to absolute death.’ A Review of Three Performances at Melbourne Fringe 2019.
Read MoreFor Liminal Presents, Mike Eleven created fifty original artworks for our audience.
Read Moreflower boy 卓颖贤 has created a track featuring the voices of Liminal magazine interviewees, answering this very question.
Read MoreA poem by Madison Griffiths.
Read MoreA piece by Tara Kenny.
Read MoreA comic by Rachel Ang, drawn exclusively for Liminal.
Read MoreA series by Pey Chi.
Read MoreA piece by Diana Nguyen.
Read MoreWe had to fake enthusiasm and subjective emotion so that they couldn’t replace us, but they did anyway. A short story by Cher Tan.
Read MoreA drawing by Viet-My Bui.
Read More'thundering the sound / the trouble where he dreams of things / plainly sided with day, grey strange & wild' Two poems by Robert Wood.
Read MoreI know I should be the master/ Of my own healing. Two poems by Roj Amedi.
Read MoreI tip my fedora to her and whisper, ‘Namaste’. A piece by Michelle Law.
Read MoreI was born in a metropolis of nearly twenty million bodies, to a small family with medium pockets and very large hearts. A piece by Kamna Muddagouni.
Read MoreA photo series by Stephanie Yap and Matthew Vrettas of Ghost Wares.
Read MoreThe core of the vietnamese body is not the heart but the stomach. An excerpt from Thanh Hằng Phạm's minh zine vol. ii.
Read MoreAn excerpt from Anu Kumar's new series, Nagar.
Read MoreAn excerpt from an upcoming photographic series from Anne Moffat.
Read MoreA poem by Adolfo Aranjuez
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