Advertising helps fund Big Issue’s mission to end poverty
News

Homeless people and prisoners tell lockdown stories in new exhibition

The Paperchains project will document the impacts of Covid-19 on the ‘less heard’ voices of isolated communities

A new project aims to give a platform to the Covid-19 experiences of isolated communities whose voices are “often less heard”.

Paperchains will offer a space to share the lockdown stories of prisoners, homeless people, the Armed Forces and NHS workers, to ensure that their experiences are recorded for generations to come.

Organisers are inviting submissions in the form of various mediums — from a journal entry, short story or poem to a drawing, sketch or painting.

Bronze, silver and gold awards will be given to the best entries, with a curated selection set to go on display in an exhibition planned for next year. An accompanying book will also be made available.

The Paperchains project is the brainchild of author A.G. Smith, whose work in prison libraries across Staffordshire has been highlighted by C4’s Secret Millionaire and BBC Radio 4’s PM.

Advertising helps fund Big Issue’s mission to end poverty
Advertising helps fund Big Issue’s mission to end poverty

In an article for Inside Time, the national newspaper for prisoners and detainees, he said that his aim was to create “a proud record of the voices that are crying out to be heard just as much as everyone else.”

He added: “I want us to create something that future generations will study as they try to understand what this time must have been like for those who lived through it.

The deadline for submissions is 5 July 2020 (which also happens to be the date that the NHS was established in 1948. Entries should be sent by post to Paperchains, PO Box 7482, Stourbridge, DY8 9HH or via email to paperchains20@outlook.com.

Here at The Big Issue, we’re proud to support the project. We also recognise the need to give a voice to those who are so often silenced – now more than ever.

That’s why we recently launched our first ever podcast, The Big Miss You, which highlights the devastating impacts — both financially and emotionally— that lockdown has had on our vendors.

The weekly podcast is also a celebration of Big Issue vendors’ place at the heart of their communities, offering a space for them and their readers to leave messages for each other.

You can listen and subscribe via Apple, Spotify, Google, Acast, Stitcher, TuneIn and YouTube.

Advertising helps fund Big Issue’s mission to end poverty

GIVE A GIFT THAT CHANGES A VENDOR'S LIFE THIS CHRISTMAS 🎁

For £36.99, help a vendor stay warm, earn an extra £520, and build a better future.
Grant, vendor

Recommended for you

View all
Comedian Suzi Ruffell: 'Laughter is a wonderful thing. It helps us see each other's humanity'
Suzi Ruffell at the Spread a Smile Comedy evening at the Comedy Store in 2025. Image: Suzan Angela Moore
Christmas

Comedian Suzi Ruffell: 'Laughter is a wonderful thing. It helps us see each other's humanity'

UK asylum system delays and inefficiencies found to be 'wasting public funds' and 'harming lives'
Habib from Afghanistan explained that people are only crossing the Channel in small boats because they're desperate
Asylum seekers

UK asylum system delays and inefficiencies found to be 'wasting public funds' and 'harming lives'

More than 380,000 people will spend Christmas homeless – what does Labour's strategy mean for them?
a homeless person lying on the street with their belongings
homelessness

More than 380,000 people will spend Christmas homeless – what does Labour's strategy mean for them?

Labour aims to halve number of rough sleepers by 2029 with new £3.5bn homelessness strategy
homelessness minister Alison McGovern alongside Mayor of London Sadiq Khan
homelessness

Labour aims to halve number of rough sleepers by 2029 with new £3.5bn homelessness strategy