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Topic: Neovictorian


In the News (Wed 30 Dec 09)

  
  Essays
"Neovictorian" is a declaration of loyalty to a culture that offered poets an honorable place on the public stage, not only as singers but as thinkers who could help to sort out the complexities of modern knowledge and life.
With no particular political axe to grind, Neovictorian/ Cochlea seems to prefer incisive lyric poetry with serious or lightly satiric content.
It is friendly to those who choose to write in form, and that's a good thing because Expansive/New Formalist poets don't have too many venues to publish in anymore.
www.edge-city.com /page2.htm   (5370 words)

  
 hypocrisy in the diamond age   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-05)
Neal Stephenson, in his novel The Diamond Age, gives us a magnificent exegesis on hypocrisy as a social lubricant and an essential support of the norms of decency and civility.
Here it is, from the mouth of a "NeoVictorian," Lord Finkle-McGraw: BEGIN CITATION: "You know, when I was a young man, hypocrisy was deemed the worst of vices," Finkle-McGraw said.
You see, in that sort of climate, you are not allowed to criticise others -- after all, if there is no absolute right and wrong, then what grounds is there for criticism?...
pasta.cantbedone.org /pages/3ZArh4.htm   (442 words)

  
 Ship   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-05)
After an envelope with a subscriber's copy sent to the Carribean was trashed, and then another one sent to the southwest, we decided the feds were checking to see if the magazine wasn't really just a cover for dope smuggling.
has a somewhat genteel reputation, in spite of some fairly objectionable material, probably because of the conservative layout and neovictorian artwork, and the emphasis on beauty.
You can say almost anything in the magazine, as long as you do it beautifully.
meadhall.homestead.com /Ship.html   (1031 words)

  
 Noneuclidean Cafe - Jamieson
Leland Jamieson, a performing arts center manager for most of his working life, is retired and lives in East Hampton, Connecticut, USA.
His recent and forthcoming work appears in Bellowing Ark, Blue Unicorn, Neovictorian /Cochlea, Raintown Review, and 3rd Muse.
He has gathered a number of published formal poems, some with streaming audio, under the title Needles in a Pinewood at www.geocities.com/lelandjamieson.
www.noneuclideancafe.com /issues/vol1_issue3_Summer2006/jamieson.htm   (281 words)

  
 Behind A Gallery of Ethopaths:
Since the recent publication in the journals Neovictorian Cochlea, Pivot, and Edge City Review of several selections from my verse satire A Gallery of Ethopaths, a number of persons have written to me inquiring about the words ethopathy, ethopath and ethopathic.
My forthcoming article in Maledicta ("Ethopathy: A Word Whose Time Has Come") will give the philological and historical basis for these neologisms.
I dare them to prove me wrong about this.
www.expansivepoetryonline.com /journal/cult022002.html   (2352 words)

  
 Poetry Porch
Currently her sonnet sequence "The World's Last Rose: Sonnets for the Prince of Twilight" is featured on The Hypertexts.
She edits a poetry magazine, The Neovictorian/ Cochlea.
Practicing physician and lecturer at Harvard Medical School.
www.poetryporch.com /contribal.html   (2194 words)

  
 Chantarelle's Notebook   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-05)
His poetry has appeared in Mobius, Hummingbird, Avocet, Sidereality, Tamafyhr Mountain Poetry, Lily, Spillway Review, Malleable Jangle, Electric Acorn, Free Verse, and Plum Ruby Review.
He also has poetry forthcoming in The Neovictorian/ Cochlea, Fifth Street Review, and Poetry Salzburg Review.
Free web design, web templates, web layouts, and website resources!
www.geocities.com /chantarellesnotebook/flannery.html   (80 words)

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