 My name is Angelique Golding. I'm doing a collaborative PhD with Queen Mary University of London and the British Library. My research is on the magazine called Wassafiri. Wassafiri started out to platform Black, Caribbean, African and Asian literature, raising its profile. But it was also about how it was taught in schools as well. My supervisor at Queen Mary, we meet regularly to talk about the research of course, but also her own experience because she's co-edited her own issue of Wassafiri. It's great to be on the Queen Mary campus because that's actually where the Wassafiri magazine offices are located. Quite coincidentally, I was invited to co-edit an issue. We just had the reprint, Angelique. The one that you... That's really great! To do my own issue feels very surreal because now I will be entering the very archive that I'm actually researching at the moment. So that gives me great joy. Being at the British Library has been amazing because this is actually where the Wassafiri magazine archive is held. Obviously my supervisor is there as a source of support and information. The fact that there's a constant conversation between all of my supervisors, it just feels a really dynamic space to be to have this collaborative partnership. One of the things that is so amazing about this collaborative PhD is that I will be actually facilitating the archive being made public and being made accessible. So that's really exciting to know that at some point other researchers, even just interested members of the public can come along and get to look. So I do feel quite privileged to have some hand in that, definitely.