Emerson Review

Emerson Review  
Former names
'The Scribe'
Abbreviated title (ISO 4)
TEM
Discipline Literary
Language English
Edited by Co-editor in 1978, and contributing author: Denis Leary.
Publication details
Publisher
Emerson College (United States)
Publication history
1953–present
Frequency Annual
Indexing
ISSN 2156-2237
LCCN 12006604
OCLC no. 9215110
Links

The Emerson Review, founded in 1953 as The Scribe, is Emerson College's award-winning and oldest student-run literary magazine. The book is published annually and is released each spring during a Release Event, which is open to the entire literary community of Boston.[1]

The Emerson Review accepts submissions of poetry,[2] fiction,[3] nonfiction (magazine/journalism articles, personal essay, memoir, etc.), song lyrics, stage- and screenplays, and photography/other visual art.

The editors receive thousands of submissions during the reading period and narrow the work down via meetings with undergraduate readers, graduate students, interns, Emerson College faculty and former editorial staff.[4]

The journal has featured work by alumni such as Steven Wright and Henry Winkler.[5]

Many of the editorial staff work in conjunction with the journal Ploughshares. Selected stories are nominated for a Pushcart Prize.[6]

Currently, distribution of The Emerson Review is limited to the Emerson College community, though distribution is being expanded to include bookstores in the Boston area, and a mailing campaign involving Emerson College donors and former Emerson Review editors is being developed.

Masthead

Editor-in-Chief Jordan Koluch Managing Editor Jessica Slavin Treasurer/Publicist Melanie Lieberman Webmaster Ashleigh Heaton Designer Carly Loman Fiction Editor Emily Murphy Assistant Fiction Editors CJ Nadeau & Libby Webster Nonfiction Editors Carly Loman & Sara Selevitch Poetry Editors Rachel Amico & Amanda Bondi

References

  1. Emerson Review News. Release pary for volume 41
  2. Poetry ascetic statement
  3. Sommers, Aaron "The Last Millenium Monster."
  4. Editorial: A" Guest" Editorial. RSF – The Antioch Review, 1983 – JSTOR
  5. Emerson College 2012: Off the Record College Prowler Books. Vanessa Willoughby, Jordan Ross,
  6. "Pushcart Nominees for 2011."

External links

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