Age, Biography and Wiki
Joshua Ip was born on 1982 in Singaporean, is a Singaporean poet and writer. Discover Joshua Ip's Biography, Age, Height, Physical Stats, Dating/Affairs, Family and career updates. Learn How rich is He in this year and how He spends money? Also learn how He earned most of networth at the age of 41 years old?
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Poet, writer and editor |
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41 years old |
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Singapore |
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Singapore |
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He is a member of famous Poet with the age 41 years old group.
Joshua Ip Height, Weight & Measurements
At 41 years old, Joshua Ip height not available right now. We will update Joshua Ip's Height, weight, Body Measurements, Eye Color, Hair Color, Shoe & Dress size soon as possible.
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Dating & Relationship status
He is currently single. He is not dating anyone. We don't have much information about He's past relationship and any previous engaged. According to our Database, He has no children.
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Joshua Ip Net Worth
His net worth has been growing significantly in 2022-2023. So, how much is Joshua Ip worth at the age of 41 years old? Joshua Ip’s income source is mostly from being a successful Poet. He is from Singapore. We have estimated
Joshua Ip's net worth
, money, salary, income, and assets.
Net Worth in 2023 |
$1 Million - $5 Million |
Salary in 2023 |
Under Review |
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Pending |
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Under Review |
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Poet |
Joshua Ip Social Network
Timeline
He founded the inaugural Singapore Poetry Writing Month in April 2014, a movement which gathered poets online to write a poem a day for 30 days. Recent editions reached an audience of 5,000 and included physical events such as MRT-based poetry readings and performance-poetry-professional-wrestling hybrid performances. He runs Sing Lit Station, a literary non-profit that was awarded a National Arts Council seed grant to develop writing in Singapore through literary bootcamps and workshops.
He has published four volumes of poetry with Math Paper Press and edited seven anthologies. His first collection, "sonnets from the singlish" (Math Paper Press, 2013) co-won the Singapore Literature Prize in 2014. The collection has been referred to in The Straits Times as "a playful subversion of the form's rhythm and rhymes". Ip's work in "sonnets from the singlish" has been described as building "a distinctly contemporary Singapore seen slant through the formalism of his verse", and "[his] greatest strength lies in crafting these absurd scenarios, which vividly and concisely capture the gist of his philosophising." Ip's focus on formal poetry has been compared to the "freeer approach of to the writing of poetry of Singapore's first generation of postcolonial poets." Of his latest collection, "footnotes on falling", Rain Taxi wrote that "Ip's work binds together the morbid curiosity of our sourest livelihoods and the relief of wordplay",, and The Straits Times described the collection as "poems that work as puzzles to be decoded.".
He won the Golden Point Award for Prose in 2013 for his short story, "The Man Who Turned Into a Photocopier", and was first runner-up for Poetry in 2011. He was selected as one of the National Arts Council's "New Voices of Singapore" in 2014. He was the recipient of the Young Artist Award in 2017.
Joshua has represented Singapore at international literary festivals and publishing conferences including the Griffith Review New Asia Now tour of Australia, Asia-Pacific Writers Festival in Bangkok, the Goa Literary Festival, the London Book Fair, and the New York Singapore Literature Festival. He has been a featured writer at the Singapore Writers Festival since 2012.
Joshua Ip (born 1982, Singapore) is a Singaporean poet, and writer.
He is a often-cited editor of contemporary Singapore poetry anthologies, having co-edited with Christine Chia the collection "A Luxury We Cannot Afford", a response to the 1969 pronouncement by then-PM of Singapore Lee Kuan Yew that "poetry is a luxury we cannot afford."The collection brings together "a rich variety of poems by both established figures and newly emergent voices", and "endeavors to imagine and create spaces for literature in Singapore.". Later anthologies include "Unfree Verse" (2015), the first collection of Singaporean formal poetry spanning 80 years of history, which "represents an unprecedented attempt to plug the gap where Singaporean formal poetry is concerned",, and "Call and Response"(2019), reviewed in The Straits Times as "[taking] Singapore's burgeoning migrant worker poetry scene a step further by pairing works by more than 30 migrants, the bulk of them low-wage transient workers, with poems written in response by locals." The Journal of Commonwealth Literature notes that "he has emerged as a prolific contributor to the genre... [having] either individual collections or edited volumes each year."