One of the great things about Seneca Review, we feel, is the blurring of the boundaries between and among genres. We tend to order the magazine’s content for this purpose. Starting with our last issue, we decided to stop making a genre distinction between the “poetry” and the “lyric essays.” Eventually, it became too difficult and probably too unnecessary for us to do so.
The work we publish happens mostly in the
borderlands between the two to begin with—the interstices or fusions of poetry
and essay, of one genre and another. That’s often what excites us most. So we
wanted to harness that preference and push it a few steps farther. We don’t
like to be stagnant even in our editorial preferences, so we wanted to push
ourselves and SR into a new space.
We wanted to start crossing bigger lines of
genre and form. Not just between poetry and essays but between writing and
visual art, between analog and digital. Not that this is exactly new, but it is
surprisingly absent in the majority of literary magazines around. Though, our
Lyric Essay Special Issue did feature photographs that we considered essays—still,
we felt like that was just a start. We wanted to cross lines of form in a much
more concerted way.
We asked ourselves, what if we collected just hybrids and
outliers and anachronisms? Work that went beyond the lyric essay, beyond the
prose poem, beyond just words or just images even. We wanted to let the essay
happen in the porous, often unsaid context its always been in: intermingling
with experimental typography, splicings,
documentary poetics, visual-textual hybrids, collage, live coding, new media,
old media with new applications, audio, video, bio-art, book arts, and the
like.
In other words, we wanted to invite poignantly
difficult work into SR. That was the impetus of our upcoming special issue Beyond
Category. To accommodate the
type of dual or multiple media work we’re looking for, the special issue will
appear simultaneously in print and online. To have a nexus point or gathering
place for writers and artists working in more than a single medium or working
in an original way in a single medium felt pivotal to us.
It also seemed vital
to have a particularly hybrid editorial approach to our Beyond Category special
issue. So we three of us on the masthead—Kathryn Cowles (poetry editor), Joshua
Unikel (assistant editor), and David Weiss (editor). All three of us work
several forms—from radio essay to installation art, text-and-image to graphic
design, new media to pen-and-ink drawing—and we all make work that’s
in-between, so it made sense for the three of us to team up for this one.
In fact, gravitating toward work that’s “beyond
category” is a rather natural progression for SR as far as we see it. From the
1970s until the late 90s, we focused exclusively on poetry. Since 1997, we’ve championed and published the
lyric essay. A large part of each issue now is devoted to the more experimental
forms of creative nonfiction. For the past five years, we’ve let the essay
reflect back at itself by publishing online interviews on the lyric essay with
practitioners whose work is simultaneously appearing in the magazine – writers
like Thalia Field, Stephen Kuusisto, Brian Christian, Christine Hume, Aaron
Kunin and Dan Beachy-Quick.
So now in the 2010s, we’re continuing what’s
actually always been in our editorial mindset: keep it current and keep it
quality. This is simply our way of doing so in the Age of Information, at a
time when it’s become almost impossible to think about the essay in a vacuum,
literary or otherwise.
Our Beyond Category special issue is slated for
this January. The deadline for submissions is October 31. To submit, send your
hybrids and outliers to our Submittable page.
Feel free to contact us with queries via email
at SenecaReview@hws.edu.
—Kathryn Cowles, Joshua Unikel, David Weiss
Kathryn
Cowles is a poetry editor at the Seneca
Review. Cowles has her PhD from the University of Utah. Her book of poetry Eleanor, Eleanor, not your real name
(Bear Star Press, 2008) won the Brunsman Poetry Prize. Her writing has appeared
recently in Drunken Boat, Free Verse, The
Offending Adam, and the Academy of
American Poets Poem-a-Day.
Joshua Unikel is the assistant editor of the Seneca Review. Unikel has an MFA from
the University of Iowa’s Nonfiction Writing Program. Currently, he is an MFA
candidate in the University at Buffalo’s Visual Studies Program. His art has
shown recently in New York and Buffalo. His writing has appeared recently in [PANK], Sonora Review, Fugue, and Booth.
David Weiss is the editor at the Seneca Review. Weiss is the author of a recent book of poems, GNOMON, two
previous collections of poems, The Fourth Part of the World and The
Pail of Steam, and a novel, The Mensch, which was published by
Mid-List Press as a winner in their first novel contest. He has also published
numerous essays on poetry.
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