Ezines
Electronic
magazines get poetry out there in the world with ease
and at very low cost. Ezines vary from relaxed to
elegant, from the curious to the essential. They are
also a growing and important market for poetry.
Language poetry, visual poetry, and hypertext poetry
live in these places. Here are a few.
Canadian
ezines
Experimental
poetry
International
E-zines
Print
Magazines with a Web Presence
New
Formalist Magazines
First
Stop: Metalist
at State University of New York (Buffalo) is a large
(and I mean large) index to literary ezines.
Some individual
Ezines can be found at the following
sites:
Canadian
ezines.
- First Stop: The
Porcupine's Quill Can Lit Links page will guide
you to many Canadian Literary magazines which have a
presence on the web.
- It's
Still Winter is a magazine from the University of
Northern British Columbia. This is one of those sites which sometimes goes to
sleep. If you don't get it, it's worth a second
try.
- Germination,
in its original life, was a small quarterly journal of
poetry in the 1970s, which now offers poetry and
fiction online, hosted by Assets
Dot Net Inc., a new Canadian corporation
interested in Canadian Literature and dedicated to
development of e-commerce, including the development
and operation of "theme sites".
- Taddle
Creek is a Canadian literary magazine publishing
fiction and poetry by writers from across
Toronto.
- Nthposition has an intriguing name
and a mix of politics, opinion, poetry, fiction and other genres. Poetry editor
is Todd Swift -- contact him before submitting anything.
- Based in Ottawa, but wide-ranging in scope (and completely on-line),
Poetics.ca "will work to explore the astonishing diversity
of approaches to poetic text, with a focus on writing by Canadian authors. The site is
designed to evolve with each new issue, with the help of its contributors and audience.
The first issue, now on-line, includes ideas about poetry from David McGimpsey and Nathalie
Stephens (statements on poetics), Colin Morton (on American poets Rachel Loden and Wendy Battin)
and Andy Weaver ("That Bastard Ghazal"), and a conversation/interview between Stephanie Bolster
and rob mclennan."
- Toronto's
The
Danforth Review is a lively literary e-zine.
- Or there's always
Another Toronto Quarterly!
- Phu
Online is a literary journal based in
Calgary.
- Wr-eye-tings
Scratchpad. Designed to complement the
Wr-eye-tings Concrete Poetry Discussion
List hosted by Carl Peters of Simon Fraser
University in Burnaby, B.C., this site provides a
forum for display of visual poetry and a bulletin
board for comments upon it. A world-class site.
- Exit is a French
poetry magazine from Quebec.
- Broken
Pencil is a guide to alternative culture in
Canada. Broken pencil reviews alternative alternative
publications, books, CDs, tapes, and vinyl published
in Canada. All the listings in broken pencil are
organized alphabetically and by province/region.
Canadian zines are a priority, and there are lots of
them, with a strong emphasis on poetry. They also
provide excerpts of many zines. A fine site.
- New Canadian online poetry journal here: http://www.barbitos.com/
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Experimental
poetry. It's not to
everyone's taste, but it can be very exhilarating. Form
tends to be content.
- First Stop: CybpherAnthology.
This site contains a wealth of links to this kind of
poetry, sorted by author and journal, but without
annotation.
- First
Stop, too.
The
Electronic Literature Directory provides an
important internet node for a vital new poetry growing
day by day on the web. There are links to a 1001
wonders here. Categories include short poetry, long
poetry, poetry collections, the same for fiction,
non-fiction, and drama, Technique/Genre,
Hypertext/Other Interaction, Recorded
Reading/Performance, Animated Text, Other Multimedia,
Generated Text, and Reader Collaboration.
- League member David Dowker edits The
Alterran Poetry Assemblage.
- The
Electronic Poetry Center at the State University
of New York (Buffalo) is the world centre for
experimental poetry, and hosts the following magazines
(and more):
- Rif/t
, an Electronic Space for Poetry, Prose, and
Poetics
- Juxta/Electronic
- Experioddi(cyber)cist
An Experioddicist is a participant in Experioddica,
coined by Bob Grumman in the late 1990s and defined
by him as a term originally used for experimental
odd periodicals devoted to exotica, but whose
meaning seems to have spread to cover all forms of
underground art, science & other forms of
culture (including, obviously, cyberculture).
- inter\face
The first issue of inter\face magazine was
published in 1992. WordPerfect, a laser printer,
and computers in the Humanities computer lab
provided the perfect opportunity to collect,
publish, and distribute works of the large
community of writers at and around SUNY Albany.
inter\face was considered a "forum" for writers to
share their works with others. Writers were asked
to "contribute" their work rather than "submit" to
the power of the publisher. Since the editors --
Katie Yates, Nancy Dunlop, and Benjamin Henry --
were writers themselves, editorial decisions were
based on a writing workshop model.
- Passages
- Angel
Exhaust Archives only -- last issue is 1996.
- Readme
is an online journal of poetics featuring interviews,
essays and reviews germane to contemporary poetry.
Poetry published only in tandem with author interviews
and/or critical prose, except in cases of
poem-as-reading/critique.
- Beehive,
is a hypertext, multimedia journal. Very intelligent.
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Top]
International
E-zines. Some of the finest
electronic magazines from around the world.
- The
Prose Poem contains prose poems. No kidding.
Really. They win my award for the best-named journal
on the web.
- Trout
is a literary journal from New Zealand. Check it out:
trout on the main page, a fly on the links. Caught
ya?
- The Muse ApprenticeGuild says it's is the largest international literary quarterly on the
Internet with 30 co-editors around the world and over two million readers every
year. To view its pages, use use internet explorer 5.5 or higher or netscape 6.0
and a resolution of 1024x768. uses pieces of any length, including extended poetic
works novellas and novels.
- Philadelphia
produces CrossConnect.
- Overland
is "Australia's leading radical cultural and
literary magazine". There's a lot of competition for
that honour.
- Cordite
also hails from Australia. It is strictly a poetry
magazine.
- Retort is another Oz product --
a lively bimonthly covering poetry
and the arts and with a great slogan: "think forward -- answer back".
- The
newest issue of The
Transcendental Friend is jam-packed with
translations of poetry. Always a treat.
- Zyzzyva
calls itself the Last Word: West Coast Artists and
Writers. They just might be right. Worth a look. They
have poetry, creative non-fiction, and prose.
- The New Delta Review
The New Delta Review, a journal of the LSU Graduate Creative Writing Program, has published many acclaimed writers,
such as Anne Carson, U.S. Poet Laureate Billy Collins, U.K. Poet Laureate Andrew Motion,
Paul Muldoon, winner of the American Academy of Arts and Letters Award in Literature and
the Irish Times Literature Prize for Poetry; the former U.S. Poet Laureate Robert Pinsky; National Magazine Award winner
Tim Gautreaux. The New Delta Review also features artwork and literature in translation by international, national and
regional artists.
- Arts and Letters Daily: For an update on international arts news,
and a great series of links, try the Arts and Letters Daily an e-journal devoted to "Philosophy, aesthetics, literature, language, ideas, criticism, culture ...". You get the idea.
- Sara
McAuley's students do an eye-catching job on this zine
from California. TATTOO
HIGHWAY: Indelible Marks is officially
online.
- The
East Village Poetry Web is an elegant
English-language literary magazine from Japan. A
recent issue (still online) was devoted to Canadian
poetry. The previous issue contains online videos of
poetry readings. All issues are archived, including a
LA/NY special.
- Jacket.
A truly essential and always challenging literary
magazine from Australia. This is one of the best of
all ezines on the web.
- Light
& Dust
Links to Light & Dust anthology, mostly of
concrete and visual poetry.
- non.
If all this experimental stuff leaves you cold, do at
least try "non". This magazine deals with the issue of
nothingness, splendidly, with an ease of surface often
missing from the other magazines. Archives only -- last issue is 1998.
- Ubuweb: visual,
concrete, & sound poetry. This is the best of
all visual poetry sites. Found poetry, too.
- Octavo
is a magazine featuring some League members, and is
part of the award-winning non-profit literary site
The Alsop
Review.
- It's
not only poems that rhyme, it seems, but countries.
Gangway is a new magazine for contemporary literature from
Australia & Austria: Short stories, poetry, essays
& experimental prose.
- The Blue
Moon Review has featured work by some League
members.
- Prairie
Poetry from the North American plains is showcased
and published on this online journal.
- Meanjin
offers fine writing and provocative ideas from the
University of Melbourne.
- Milk.
With a strong Beat influence, but also touches of the
Paris Review in its glory days and the Surrealists
with romaine lettuce in taxis, not to mention a really
elegant title which justifies a clean, colourless
background, Milk is a darn fine magazine stemming
directly from the creation of milk magazine in its
print incarnation by Larry Sawyer. Excellent.
- Quarterly
West is a literary journal hailing from Utah.
- The
LitRag is a new ezine from Seattle.
- New
American Writing is a beautiful literary journal.
- For
a guide to new experimental ezines, Duration
is your place.
- The
Poetry Kit maintains a list of links to magazines
which publish poetry, both on and (for the most
part) offline. What makes it so useful, is that there
are links to magazines in all of the following
countries: Australia, Canada, India, Ireland, New
Zealand, UK, USA, as well as On-line and in
Newsletters.
- Lit Line, a resource site for independent literature (what
we'd call small press publishing here in Canada),
maintains links
to literary journals with an online presence, from
Agni to ZYZZYVA. They pride themselves on having the
most extensive and refined collection of such links on
the web, including links to online
literary journals with content only to be found on the
web, including hypertext, radical prose,
experimental poetry, and good old narrative.
- Poetry
Publishers Online lists nearly 200 publishers of
poetry, mostly ezines, and whether they are or are not
willing to accept emailed submissions.
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Print
Magazines with a Web Presence
- Although these aren't
exactly e-zines, they often provide a substantial
glimpse into the print magazine, including samples.
Definitely worth a look.
-
One of Canada's best-loved and longest-running little mags is The Fiddlehead.
Visit its website here.
Arc:
Canada's National Poetry Magazine now has a home
on the Web, with information about submission
guidelines, current and past issues, awards and
contests, subscription and advertising rates, and a
selection of writing from contributors and contest
winners.
-
Room
of One's Own is Canada's long-standing
women's-only writing magazine.
- The
New England Review maintains a list of
links
to traditional poetry magazines. In a web of experiment and hypertext, this is invaluable. Thanks,
folks.
Graffito
is a bi-monthly poetry poster with a website of its
own, from Ottawa.
Vallum is a new and beautifully-designed poetry mag from Montreal. Interested in work that is "original and previously unpublished
and fresh and edgy, something that reflects contemporary experience and is also well-crafted. Open to most styles -
experimental and traditional. (Usually, issues are put together with an underlying theme in mind, so not all poetry can be accepted, even if it is genius!)" No simultaneous submissions.
Also takes books for review consideration. Send by regular mail (no e-mail submissions) to Vallum, P.O. Box 48003, Montreal, Quebec H2V 4S8, from September 15th to April 15th only
(except for the Japan theme issue).
- If writing poetry makes you want to rip your clothes off, we may have the mag for you.
No, I'm not making this up. Stark is a new annual journal of poetry and photography
that's looking for submissions of three to four poems. If your poems are accepted, you agree to pose for nude
photos with a professional photographer, and one or more of the images will accompany your
work! Payment is one copy of the journal. You may preview the photographer's craft (but not Stark, yet) here.
Ms. considered from July 1 to October 31 (postmark dates). No e-mail, multiple or computer-file submissions. Mail submissions to: Stark, Hanover Press, P. O. Box
596, Newtown, CT 06470-0596.
The
Canadian Magazine Publishers Association showcases the
literary
magazines of Canada.
- The
premier African and African-American literary journal
Callaloo
has posted an introduction to the print edition. They
will send you a free sample copy.
- Fence
magazine offers samples of its print magazine, as well
as a contest.
- Sun
& Moon Press offers the finest international
poetry and prose, impeccably translated, elegantly
presented.
- The
last three issues of Promoteo
are online, with interrnational anthologies of poetry,
in Spanish, and a bilingual French/Spanish edition,
worth checking out.
Prairie
Fire, from Winnipeg, is as good as it gets.
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New
Formalist Magazines
Classically formal poetry is
making a resurgence. These magazines are new-formalist
friendly, although not all of them are exclusively
new formalist.
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This Page is maintained
by John Oughton. Last update: April, 2004.
Copyright The League of Canadian Poets, Harold Rhenisch, and John Oughton, 2004
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