BSL Poet Laureate
2026

Honouring Deaf creativity and the beauty of British Sign Language

Celebrating the nation’s BSL poets and the power of storytelling through sign

About

The British Deaf Association (BDA) is proud to launch its fourth annual competition to find the UK’s next Deaf British Sign Language (BSL) Poet Laureate, as part of celebrations for National BSL Day on 28 April 2026.

National BSL Day marks the historic recognition of BSL as an indigenous language of Great Britain under the British Sign Language (BSL) Act, which received Royal Assent on 28 April 2022.

Deaf BSL signers from across the UK are invited to submit a two-minute video of original BSL poetry or poetic performance by 20 March 2026. The winner will be announced on National BSL Day, 28 April 2026.

Why the BSL Poet Laureate Matters

The competition shines a spotlight on BSL as a living, expressive art form and celebrates the unique ways Deaf people share stories through movement and emotion.

BSL poetry connects emotion, language, and movement in a way that spoken words never could. It’s a celebration of Deaf identity and the shared experience of communication through sign. It builds on a rich legacy. Trailblazers like Dot Miles laid the groundwork for sign-language poetry in the UK. She insisted that “signs have a rhythm, a meter of their own”, allowing the hands to become poetic instruments.

By honouring that tradition, this competition gives new poets the same opportunity: to explore how BSL can not just translate spoken poetry, but become poetry in its own right. Through movement, space, expression and handshape, BSL poets craft works that carry rhythm and meaning visually and viscerally; works that speak to Deaf and hearing audiences alike.

Dot-Miles-BW-Cut-Out

From your fingertips see a frog leap, at a passing butterfly. The word becomes the picture in this language for the eye.

Dorothy 'Dot' Miles - Translation of her poem 'Language for the Eye'