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Topic: Literary magazine


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In the News (Fri 29 Aug 08)

  
  Literary magazine - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
A literary magazine is a periodical devoted to literature in a broad sense.
Literary magazines are often called literary journals, or little magazines, which is not meant as a pejorative but instead as a contrast with larger commercially oriented magazines.
Literary magazines first began to appear in the early part of the nineteenth century, mirroring an overall rise in the number of books, magazines, and scholarly journals being published at that time.
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Literary_magazine   (604 words)

  
 Council of Literary Magazines and Presses   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-02)
Literary magazines are published in all fifty states and the District of Columbia.
Most university-based magazines were founded in the 1930s and 1940s when various "schools" of writing and literary criticism were formed and outlets were needed for their expression.
Literary magazines had a unique role as iconoclasts in the publishing world until the 1960s when many social taboos were broken.
www.clmp.org /indie_publishing/indi_litpubl.html   (1398 words)

  
 Literary fiction - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
For literary fiction, the dividing line cannot be accurately drawn on the basis of content alone, and has to include style as a consideration.
Literary prizes usually concern themselves with literary fiction, and their shortlists can give a working definition.
Literary magazines, especially those affiliated with universities or ones considered for selection of anthologies by groups like the Pushcart Prize or O.
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Literary_fiction   (484 words)

  
 Mellon Middle School Literary Magazine   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-02)
Produced in the spring, the literary magazine is a collection of stories, poems, and essays contributed by sixth, seventh and eighth grade students.
With the philosophy “for the students and by the students,” the literary magazine is a wonderful chance for students to express their ideas in published form and to work on a real world publication.
During the Writing Celebration, selections from the literary magazine are read; refreshments are served; students receive award certificates; and the first copies of the magazine are distributed.
www.mtlsd.org /mellon/literarymagazine.asp   (506 words)

  
 Literary Magazine Reviews :: NewPages :: Current Lit Mag Reviews
If I were to close my eyes and imagine a literary magazine, it would look much like The Antioch Review—no filler, the only artwork a cover to hold the stories together.
We have decided that the small brown bird is a she.” The poetry has a slightly different, more personable aesthetic than the fiction, and the two create an intriguing tension.
He is a man who can't understand why his wife is apparently recovering from a terminal illness; who "[likes] the idea of a tomb with a star map inside it"; who struggles to understand the mysteries of life and death.
www.newpages.com /magazinestand/litmags/default.htm   (1682 words)

  
 Literary magazine gains steam - News
Angelingo might be a new magazine to most USC students, but its name and popularity is starting to catch on with its readers.
The magazine is an entirely student-created, student-run journal that was borne out of the College of Letters, Arts and Sciences in the spring 2004 semester.
"(Angelingo is) the only liberal-arts-based magazine on campus where you can both write and work with other students to edit their papers," Lindsey Meyer, the editor of the Life section, wrote in an e-mail.
www.dailytrojan.com /news/2005/02/15/News/Literary.Magazine.Gains.Steam-864423.shtml   (364 words)

  
 Emotions Literary Magazine   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-02)
EMOTIONS, "where the pen meets the heart" is an internationally acclaimed literary magazine published by Wings of Dawn Publishing Co, distributed in 18 countries.
When you read this magazine, your heart and soul will be touched by the written words stirring a mixture of emotions within you.
Some of the writers you will encounter are already well known in the realms of the literary world, while others have just begun their journey.
members.aol.com /emotionsmagazine/EmotionsMagazine.html   (161 words)

  
 [No title]   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-02)
Welcome to Edgar, a quarterly print magazine dedicated to bringing you the best possible fiction, essays, poetry, and fl and white photography.
As a 501 (c) 3 corporation, Edgar is a non-profit, tax-exempt organization with two main goals: (1) To provide the reading public with quality literature and fine art photography (2) To afford writers and photographers an opportunity to see their works in print.
Poe should have a magazine named in his honor.
www.edgarliterarymagazine.com   (319 words)

  
 Epicenter:  A Literary Magazine
Epicenter: A Literary Magazine began publishing in 1994 from Riverside California.
Epicenter: A Literary Magazine has gone through the piles of tedious paperwork and is now an evil corporation.
We are now able to say “you get a magazine and a tax deduction!” in our shameless sales pitch on the “ordering” page.
www.epicentermagazine.org   (153 words)

  
 UW-RF Home to Literary Magazine Review
Literary Magazine Review, a quarterly publication, reviews literary magazines such as Ploughshares, Spoon River Poetry Review and West Branch, that publish mostly poetry and literary prose, including imaginative literature, short stories and creative non-fiction.
They read Literary Magazine Review so they can decide which magazines they want to subscribe to, or which ones to send their work to.
She said while Tracey was trying to manage two magazines, the subscriptions for Literary Magazine Review dwindled from one 1,000 to about 300, so part of her job is to bring it back around.
www.uwrf.edu /news_bureau/1102012.html   (658 words)

  
 The International School of Paris - Literary Magazine
As our sole concern here at the literary magazine is always to make your life easier, we will gladly accept your creative work by hand, e-mail, snail-mail or owl.
The previous edition of our magazine was not as plentiful as we had hoped, but things are looking brighter this year, and we can expect plenty of contributions from both the Middle and High School students.
One can tell the literary magazine team is back, hard at work when posters start showing up in Chardin and Beethoven, encouraging people to submit their work.
www.isparis.edu /Webs/Clubs/Magazine   (381 words)

  
 Princeton University - Library acquires archives of prominent literary magazine
Their intent was to create a "little magazine" dedicated to publishing good poetry and prose, including short fiction, criticism and other works of renowned and unknown writers.
The magazine has grown to serve as a major forum for the work of new writers and for the exploration of new developments in literature and the arts.
These are supplemented by the records of literary agencies such as Harold Ober Associates, the papers of prominent literary editors such as Saxe Commins (Random House) and Harold Loeb (Broom), and the papers of major modern authors such as Sylvia Beach, James Gould Cozzens and F. Scott and Zelda Fitzgerald.
www.princeton.edu /main/news/archive/S14/63/44E66/index.xml?section=topstories   (965 words)

  
 Resources: Literary Mama in the News
Literary Mama is making news, with articles appearing in newspapers from the San Francisco Bay Area, to Chicago, to Richmond, Virginia, and more.
Literary Mama, "a literary magazine for the maternally inclined," publishes fiction, poetry, creative nonfiction, literary criticism, book reviews, columns, and profiles about mother writers.
She is editor of Profiles and a columnist at Literary Mama and contributed to past NPN newsletters.
www.literarymama.com /resources/archives/000192.html   (1067 words)

  
 Bylaws of Epicenter: A Literary Magazine   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-02)
A: The name of the organization shall be Epicenter: A Literary Magazine (hereafter called "Epicenter").
A: The purpose of Epicenter: A Literary Magazine is to publish and promote excellent contemporary literature and art in order to celebrate and explore the diverse visions and understandings of our world through language and image.
A: All committees of this organization shall be appointed by the Editorial Board and serve at the pleasure of the Editorial Board.
www.epicentermagazine.org /bylaws.htm   (2787 words)

  
 Sensations Magazine   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-02)
From Spring 2001 to Winter 2005, we were one of only 26 American literary publications to publish quarterly.
December 2007 bring Sensations Magazine Issue 42, "20th Anniversary Spoken Word Issue." From 2008-2010, we plan to publish two thematic issues per year.
Welcome to Sensations Magazine, bringing "a touch of class to the proceedings" for two decades.
www.sensationsmag.com   (262 words)

  
 Amarillo Bay™ Literary Magazine - Something Good To Read™
Amarillo Bay continues the tradition of literary magazines in the new medium of the Web.
Since the objective is to present carefully crafted literature -- fiction, poetry, and nonfiction -- rather than to make money, the editors select works based on the excellence of the writing rather than for commercial viability, confident that their readers recognize and appreciate fine writing.
Literary magazines allow writers to explore new ways of writing free from concerns about the commercial marketplace.
www.amarillobay.org   (332 words)

  
 Writing program at Illinois publishes inaugural issue of literary magazine
But there is nothing even remotely little about the new literary magazine just published by the Masters in Fine Arts creative writing program at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign.
The magazine also features two Mark Twain letters, paired with an essay by Michael Martone, and six poems, printed in the original Slovenian and an English translation, by the internationally acclaimed poet Tomaz Salamun.
In her introductory Editor’s Note, Rubins quotes the Ninth Letter manifesto, originally written by assistant editor and English department graduate student Christopher Maier: “We view this magazine as an organic work of art: The overall interaction among the components is as important as the discreet objects within the content.
www.news.uiuc.edu /news/04/0421magazine.html   (889 words)

  
 Alternative Culture Literary Magazine
If you are alternative-minded, chances are you want, in a literary magazine, something off the beaten track--that is, if you still read at all.
Any literary magazine with truly creative writing will be full of alternatives: alternative worldviews, alternative methods of handling plot and description and characterization, alternative ways to construct a poetic line or personal essay.
Included, then, in this alternative literary magazine are samples of creative nonfiction, philosophy essays, poetry, commentary on computerized culture, hypertext fiction, love poetry and nature poetry, a smattering of aesthetics and literary criticism, journal writing, channeling...
www.alternativeculture.com /lit   (443 words)

  
 How to Start A Non Profit Literary Magazine - WikiHow
The poet e.e.cummings once said running a literary magazine was like pushing your head through a straw.
The advantages of a non-profit organization is you can bring in money through advertising and sales and keep the money to run the magazine without worrying about getting hit for taxes at the end of the year.
Many semi-famous authors will contribute to a new magazine for a relatively small fee and you can capitalize on their name recognition to attract other writers of equal stature and in turn use their names to attract authors with still greater name recognition.
www.wikihow.com /Start-A-Non-Profit-Literary-Magazine   (883 words)

  
 THE CHATTAHOOCHEE REVIEW -- LITERARY MAGAZINE, LITERARY JOURNAL, LITERARY SUBMISSIONS— (via CobWeb/3.1 ...   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-02)
For nearly a generation our little magazine has helped introduce many of today’s top literary writers to readers across the country.
For nearly a generation this literary journal has positively impacted the literary landscape or our city, state, and region.
In fact, in 2003, The Chattahoochee Review literary magazine was recognized for its history and contributions to the state, and was awarded a Medal in the Humanities by Georgia’s Governor.
www.gpc.edu.cob-web.org:8888 /~gpccr   (331 words)

  
 Every Literary Magazine
Every Literary Magazine is a one stop online resource for writers and editors.
Every Literary Magazine is getting a big redo, and it is a slow going process.
If you are an editor of a magazine I would be willing to trade a side banner ad for your contribution.
everylitmag.tripod.com   (196 words)

  
 LitLine: A Website for the Independent Literary Community
A literary magazine to showcase the creative writing skills of persons who have or have had a mental illness.
Founded in 1986, New American Writing is a literary magazine emphasizing contemporary American poetry.
A literary journal published by New Town Writers of Chicago.
www.litline.org /illinks/journals.html   (655 words)

  
 The Literary Magazine (via CobWeb/3.1 planetlab1.netlab.uky.edu)   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-02)
When we conceived of The Literary Encyclopedia we intended that whilst it should provide reliable and extensive reference information about lives, letters and histories, it should, like the original Encyclopédie, also foster interventions in cultural debate.
The idea that readers might come to a publication because it is reliably informed, but also because it has polemical elements, is familiar to readers of quality newspapers where the "Comment" columns invigorate the "News".
So here, we are delighted to offer this first "supplement" to The Literary Encyclopedia in the confident expectation that it will be the first of many which will move beyond the necessarily factual and circumspect into a different kind of authority, that of well-made argument and scholarly interpretation.
www.litencyc.com.cob-web.org:8888 /theliterarymagazine/editorial.php   (253 words)

  
 U. of I. magazine named 'Best New Literary Journal'
Journals must be “affirming of learned and aesthetic traditions and mission-driven to publish high-quality literary arts”; have a circulation of under 10,000 copies; and be affiliated with an academic institution, have independent non-profit status or be financially self-supporting.
The magazine’s editorial staff members are affiliated with the English department’s creative writing programs, and the design team comprises faculty and students in the School of Art and Design.
What Ninth Letter is doing in terms of design is “clearly a major leap for a literary magazine – there are only a handful that are doing anything similar,” Stanley said.
www.news.uiuc.edu /news/06/0125literaryaward.html   (549 words)

  
 Literary Mama: a literary magazine for the maternally inclined
Literary Mama: a literary magazine for the maternally inclined
Loosely based on the Mama in the Middle column Lockhart wrote for Literary Mama, the book tells the story of raising small children and caring for her mother, who had Alzheimer's disease, from a neurobiologist's perspective.
Literary Mama columnist Carol Zapata-Whelan's book Finding Magic Mountain: Life with Five Glorious Kids and a Rogue Gene Called FOP is now available from Seal Press.
www.literarymama.com   (437 words)

  
 SkylineLiteraryMagazines
Literary House Review a collection of fine stories and poetry
Skyline Magazine is a literary/arts Electronic Publication publishing stories, poetry, art, photography, interviews and articles, by international writers, poets, artists.
Our print magazines are archived in libraries and schools.
www.skylinemagazines.com   (155 words)

  
 Literary Magazine Stand - NewPages   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-02)
There are many beautiful things to be found within the pages of the magazine that celebrates words as they are written, poems as they are whittled out, and art as it is imagined and incarnated by women.
The author muses, "And when the winds reverse / perhaps those poems will all fly back, / rearranged, fonted with this new place / all the better for their night out in the jungle..." It’s why we read: for the hope we will be better for our night out among the thoughts of others.
Note: If you are interested in writing reviews for the NewPages Literary Magazine Stand, please look over the reviewer's guidelines.
www.newpages.com /magazinestand/litmags/2004_01/jan2004.htm   (3950 words)

  
 USD - Vermillion Literary Project   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-02)
The Vermillion Literary Project is an award-winning student organization that publishes a literary magazine and promotes all sorts of literary events, for both the university community and the general public.
The majority of our events are open to the general public, as we believe strongly in promoting all things literary in our local community, the region, and beyond.
USD is governed by the Board of Regents of South Dakota and is an Equal Opportunity institution.
www.usd.edu /~projlit   (209 words)

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