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NEWS
INDEX
Archives
2006
January
U. of I. magazine named
'Best New Literary Journal'
Andrea
Lynn, Humanities Editor
217-333-2177; andreal@uiuc.edu
1/25/06
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Click
photo to enlarge |
| Photo
by L. Brian Stauffer |
| The
Ninth Letter, edited by Jodee Stanley, has been named
the “Best New Literary Journal” by the
Council of Editors of Learned Journals, an allied
organization of the Modern Language Association. |
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CHAMPAIGN, Ill.
— The young and highly experimental literary magazine produced
at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign has won a prestigious
literary award.
Ninth Letter, published
by the English department
in collaboration with the School
of Art and Design, has been named “Best New Literary Journal”
by the Council of Editors of Learned Journals, an allied organization
of the Modern Language Association. The council comprises more than
450 editors of scholarly journals devoted to study in the humanistic
disciplines and is the major national organization dedicated to supporting
academic journal publishing in the humanities.
Jodee Stanley, the editor of Ninth Letter, accepted the award at MLA’s
annual meeting, in Washington, D.C., in late December.
The competition was open to “belletristic” (literary arts)
journals first published between 2003 and 2005. The first issue of Ninth
Letter was published in April 2004; the fourth issue was published last
month. Journals must be “affirming of learned and aesthetic traditions
and mission-driven to publish high-quality literary arts”; have
a circulation of under 10,000 copies; and be affiliated with an academic
institution, have independent non-profit status or be financially self-supporting.
Ninth Letter is funded by the U. of I.
The inaugural issue of Ninth Letter won gold medals for Best Cover Design
and Best Overall Design in the 2004 Annual Design Competition of the
University and College Designers Association. Several contributors have
won awards for their pieces, and many pieces have been selected for
inclusion in prestigious anthologies.
The MLA award,
like the awards that Ninth Letter previously won, “provides national
recognition for the innovative design and the high quality literature
and visual art that have made the magazine an overnight sensation; but
it also emphasizes the integral place both Ninth Letter and the MFA
program have within our department,” said Martin Camargo, the
head of the U. of I. English department. “A major award from the
MLA reminds us that all of our faculty and students share in the glory
that comes from Ninth Letter’s excellence.”
Veteran and new talent are being published in Ninth Letter, including
Pulitzer Prize-winner Robert Olen Butler; Dave Eggers – an Illinois
alumnus and New York Times best-selling author; and Ann Beattie. The
magazine’s editorial staff members are affiliated with the English
department’s creative writing programs, and the design team comprises
faculty and students in the School of Art and Design.
According to Stanley, the magazine’s “defining principle”
remains the same today as it was at its founding: “We believe
that literature and art reflect an ongoing dialogue; nothing is created
in a void, and therefore, stories, poems, essays, visual arts and other
forms of expression all speak to one another, reflect one another in
some way.”
Stanley sees the design elements in Ninth Letter as “works of
art in themselves,” but they also “serve to illuminate themes
in the magazine that might not be obvious at first glance, giving our
readers the opportunity to contemplate writing and art in new ways.”
What Ninth Letter is doing in terms of design is “clearly a major
leap for a literary magazine – there are only a handful that are
doing anything similar,” Stanley said.
“But what gives us the winning edge, especially in terms of this
award, is the commitment of our staff to presenting the best possible
work to our readers. Across the board, every person involved in Ninth
Letter strives to find the best writing to publish in our pages. A lot
of people and a lot of tastes are involved, but rather than let that
pull us apart, we use our differences as an opportunity to broaden the
magazine’s range and to expose each other to new ideas.”
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