In Praise of Disability Literary Journals
I’ve just finished putting out the September issue of Wordgathering. There is always a mixed sense of excitement
and relief when it is accomplished. As
frustrating as it can be to try to be sure that the journal presents the work
of writers in a way that makes them feel good about having their work a part of
Wordgathering, when I finally see it
all out the work – the poetry, essays, book reviews, short stories, interviews,
art and music – laid out on line, there is a real sense of satisfaction.
The current issue of Wordgathering
is especially exciting because it introduces readers to Pentimento, through an interview with its editors, editor-in-chief
Lori Brozek and poetry editor Marie Kane.
Pentimento is a new, hard copy
literary journal of disability-related literature. The journal began just a year ago and plugs
up a huge hole left in the wake of Kaleidoscope’s
decision to go totally digital.
Moreover, like its predecessor, Pentimento,
is not just a saddle-stapled magazine run off at Staples. It is modeled after The Sun, and, beautifully presented. For those of us over 30, there is still some
truth to the feeling that going to the mailbox, pulling out a professionally
published magazine and seeing your work in it provides a kind of jolt that
publication in an online journal like Wordgathering
just can’t deliver. Even more
important, though, it gives writers with disabilities or those whose work
engages disability, a new venue for their writing – raising the number to four.
Raising the number to four: Kaleidoscope, Breath and Shadow, Wordgathering and, now Pentimento. In a society that prides itself on diversity,
that is an embarassingly paltry number. True,
there are academic publications such as Disability
Studies Quarterly and Britain ’s
Journal of Literary and Cultural
Disability that produce amazing and much needed work, but these are, in the
main, scholarly – written by scholars, for scholars.
Moreover, they use very little of the kinds of writing that
the word literature invokes for most people, that is poetry, fiction, the
imaginative essay or drama.
Last year, I wrote up a proposal for a panel on small
magazines of disability literature for the annual AWP conference. The proposal included editors from Kaleidoscope, Breath and Shadow and me (representing Wordgathering) as well as Jim Ferris and Laurie Clements Lambeth,
both poets who had worked in an editorial capacity with DSQ. I’d been on several AWP
panels previously and knew that they were looking for panels that had something
new to offer. One would have thought
giving the writers of the country’s largest minority a chance to meet and talk
with the editors of the few literary magazines that actively sought their work would
have been a no-brainer. It wasn’t. To my
amazement, the proposal was rejected, even as panels re-treading previous
conference subjects were put on the roster.
Because none of the four disability lit journals is attached
to universities, funding is an issue. Breath and Shadow and Kaleidoscope both receive a small amount
of agency funding. Pentimento, did
receive a small initial grant, but now is funded entirely by the editor, Lori
Brozek, herself. Because it is a print
journal, it also has to get funding through subscribers. Each of these three gives a small token
payment for the work it accepts from writers.
Wordgathering, which depends
entirely on volunteers, does not pay. As
the editor, I’m fully aware that once writers whose work I publish find a
paying market for their work, that’s were they’ll go. I don’t blame them. They deserve monetary recognition.
Despite their lack of glamour or ability to make any real
contribution to a writer’s income, small poetry magazines – particularly within
the disabilities literature community – do fulfill an important function. Sure, even the Pushcart Prize committee, is
going to throw our nominations into their slush pile. Where we get our
satisfaction is when a previously unpublished poet that we’ve championed comes
out with their first book of poetry, when a better known poet decides to write
a poem about their disability and credits our journal with the first
publication in their most recent book or when a book first reviewed in our
journal finds its way into a recommended reading list in a college course on
disability literature. Those are the
kinds of successes that drive us as editors.
The September issue of Wordgathering
is now up and I hope the writers whose work is included there see an ever
widening audience. I hope that some
readers relate to Dan Simpson’s poems or that someone reads Michael Uniacke’s
essay on writing Deaf historical fiction and decides to take a crack at
it. I like to think someone googling John
Milton comes up with the reaction of nine writers with visual impairment to his
Sonnet XVI in this issue. Or that Deaf
artist Cynthia Weitzel’s latest work or Ona Gritz’s wonderful review of
Jennifer Bartlett’s important book of poetry
Autobiography/Anti-Autobiography catch the attention of those already
involved in teaching disability studies.
As anyone who spends a few minutes out in a field or roadside this time
of year knows, there is no telling where the seeds let loose will land. You only hope that some find the right soil
and flourish.