New Philosopher – July 2019

(Kiana) #1
NewPhilosopher

RusselHerneman


Russel Herneman is an award-winning
cartoonist whose work has appeared
in The Times of London, Private Eye,
Prospect, The Spectator, and many oth-
ers. In 2018 he won Pocket Cartoon of
the Year 2018 in the Political Cartoon
Awards, European Newspaper Design
award for illustration, and Society of
News Design Award of excellence for
Illustration. He was an exhibitor at
Mennier Gallery, London, and in 2016
and 2017 he was a finalist in Best Use
of Illustration in the Stack Awards.

AntoniaCase


Antonia Case is Literary Editor of
New Philosopher, Editor of Woman-
kind magazine, and an award-winning
writer and journalist. She was the win-
ner of the 2013 Australasian Associa-
tion of Philosophy Media Profession-
als’ Award, and in 2016 and 2017 was
shortlisted for Editor of the Year in the
International Stack Awards. Case was
selected as ‘philosopher in residence’ for
the 2016 Brisbane Writers’ Festival and
is co-founder of Bright Thinking.

ZanBoag


Zan Boag is Editor of New Philosopher,
Editorial Director of the international
newsstand magazine Womankind, and
Director of poet bookstore. In 2017
he won the Australasian Association
of Philosophy Media Professionals’
Award and was shortlisted for Editor
of the Year in the international Stack
Awards. Boag speaks regularly on phi-
losophy, technology, the media, and
ethics, and is the co-founder and host
of the monthly philosophical discus-
sion series Bright Thinking. He is a Fel-
low of the Royal Society of the Arts.


PeterStrain


Peter Strain is an AOI (Association of
Illustrators) Critics’ Choice Award-
winning illustrator based in Belfast
who specialises in creating carefully
composed, hand-rendered typogra-
phy, animation and illustration. His
work is influenced by film and music
and aims to tackle social, political and
cultural issues, and has appeared in
Empire, The Guardian, The New Yor-
ker, Time magazine, Penguin, BBC,
Fox Sports, Time Out, S ony, Esquire,
The Big Issue, The Ulster Hall, and The
Washington Post.

TomChatfield


Tom Chatfield is a British writer,
broadcaster, and tech philosopher. He
is the author of six books, including
Netymology, Live This Book!, and How
to Thrive in the Digital Age, and speaks
around the world on technology, the
arts, and media. Chatfield was launch
columnist for the BBC’s worldwide
technology site, BBC Future, is a Vis-
iting Associate at the Oxford Internet
Institute, and is a senior expert at the
Global Governance Institute.

GenísCarreras


Genís Carreras is the designer of
every cover of New Philosopher maga-
zine and the creator of Philographics:
Big Ideas in Simple Shapes. Carreras’s
work has been recognised in the AOI
World Illustration Awards, the Laus
Awards, and the Stocks Taylor Ben-
son Awards, and his work has been
featured in the books MIN: New Sim-
plicity in Graphic Design, Playing with
Type, Geometry Makes Me Happy, and
Geo/Graphics.

TiffanyJenkins


Tiffany Jenkins is an author, academic,
and broadcaster. Her books include
Keeping Their Marbles and Contest-
ing Human Remains in Museum Col-
lections, and she has written for the
Observer, the Financial Times, The
Scotsman, and The Spectator. She is an
Honorary Fellow at the University of
Edinburgh and a former visiting fel-
low at the London School of Eco-
nomics. Jenkins holds a BA in art his-
tory and a PhD in sociology.

CarlosEgan&AidaNovoa


Carlos Egan & Aida Novoa are the
art directors of New Philosopher and
Womankind magazine, as well as for
poet tea, which is produced by the
magazines’ publishers. Their work for
the publications has been recognised
by AIGA, the oldest and largest or-
ganisation for design in the United
States, as well as by Computer Arts
magazine, Desktop Mag, and Crea-
tive Journal.

Contributors

MatthewBeard


Matthew Beard is a moral philoso-
pher with an academic background in
applied and military ethics. He is an
Associate Lecturer at the University
of Notre Dame Australia and a Fellow
at The Ethics Centre, undertaking re-
search into ethical principles for tech-
nology. In 2016, he won the Australa-
sian Association of Philosophy prize.
He is a presenter on Short & Curly,
an award-winning children’s podcast
aimed at getting families to engage
with ethics in a fun and accessible way.
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