Brevity is about to launch our second
special issue, this one focused on experiences of gender. The first, Ceiling
or Sky: Female Nonfictions After the VIDA Count, focused
on the important contributions of female writers to the creative nonfiction
movement. Brevity’s
Founding Editor, Dinty W Moore, who was proud of our VIDA count (which is
always excellent), conceived of the first special issue as a one-time thing, something
to help raise awareness of the fact that women are still under-represented in
literary publishing. Published in 2012, the issue sparked a number of
productive conversations about women in publishing and brought strong,
important new works to our readers. Because of the positive response to
this issue, we decided to explore the possibility of doing other special
issues, both to encourage conversation about important issues and to ensure we
are working to increase the presence of authors from under-represented
communities.
The gender issue of Brevity
was conceived in that vein, and we hope it will be a starting point for many
readers. The conversation about gender
has been shifting dramatically within the queer community, and in academia, for
years—decades, even—but it has rarely moved into the
mainstream. When it has, people have
struggled to find their place in it. It’s not always easy to join in,
regardless of where your identity falls on the gender spectrum. We want to give our readers road maps—not
just one, but several—for how to enter this complicated,
ever-changing, incredibly important conversation.
Essays are uniquely suited for this
purpose. They aren’t meant to help the writer convince
or persuade the reader; they are meant to help the writer interrogate their own
thinking—their
own experiences, their own prejudices and beliefs—and to come out on
the other side having been changed by the act of writing it. The end point of a personal essay isn’t an answer—it’s a better, more nuanced, more
informed, more complicated question than what sparked the writer’s interest in the first place. We are looking for essays that approach
gender from this standpoint: essays that push and interrogate, explore and
expand our definitions and understandings of gender.
Because the special issues are
outside our normal way of operating, there are challenges. We have to do
special outreach projects to communities of writers who traditionally do not
often submit to Brevity. We recruit guest editors who write from those
communities, in order to be certain that we’re representing the voices of those
communities in an inclusive, sensitive way. And, unlike our other issues, we
have an anchor author for each special issue—someone whose work we admire and feel
represents the best writing about the subject of our inquiry. Kate Bornstein is
writing the keystone piece for our special gender issue and Claudia Rankine is
giving us new work for our 2016 issue on race, racism, and racialization. This
is all very exciting for us, but it’s a
little beyond our usual operating budget.
To be able to accomplish these goals,
we’ve launched the first-ever large
scale fundraiser to support the work of Brevity. For the last 18 years,
the journal has largely been funded out of Dinty’s pocket, and it was a little scary
to reach beyond that. We know that Brevity is important to many
different parts of the reader/writer community. Writing teachers often let us
know that it’s a central text in their classrooms.
Readers write to tell us how much specific essays, or the journal in general,
mean to them. Writers tell us that the pieces they publish in Brevity
are the ones that get the most attention and the largest readership. Still, we
weren’t sure if this would translate into a
willingness to help us raise the money to do these special issues.
We’re relieved to say it looks like our
readers/writers are willing to help us do this new kind of issue, and excited
by the response so far. Many of our authors have generously donated signed
books, essay critiques, and even a four-week workshop as rewards for backers.
Many others have become backers themselves. Some incredibly generous folk have
done both. We’re deeply moved by the response. That
said, we are also still several thousand dollars away from our goal, and we
hope you’ll help us out, too, by contributing
to our Kickstarter. We think these special issues are
important, and that they help grow the literary conversation and the people
involved in it, that has been central to Brevity’s mission for the last 18 years.
___________________
Sarah Einstein, former Managing Editor of Brevity, is the author of MOT: A
MEMOIR (University of Georgia Press 2015), REMNANTS OF PASSION (Shebooks
2014), and numerous essays and short stories. Her work has been awarded
a Pushcart Prize, a Best of the Net, and the AWP Prize in Creative
Nonfiction.
Silas Hansen's essays have appeared in Slate, Colorado Review, The Normal School, Hayden's Ferry Review, and elsewhere, and have earned an AWP Intro Journals Project Award and a notable mention in the 2014 Best American Essays. He is an assistant professor of creative writing at Ball State University in Muncie, Indiana.
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