期刊名称:LANDFALL
期刊简介(About the journal)
投稿须知(Instructions to Authors)
编辑部信息(Editorial Board)
About the journal
New Zealand's most established literary journal, Landfall publishes literary fiction and essays, poetry, extracts from work in progress, criticism and commentary on New Zealand arts and culture, work by photographers and artists and reviews of New Zealand books. (Landfall does not accept unsolicited reviews.) Landfall is open to work by New Zealand and Pacific writers, or by other writers who have visited New Zealand or whose work has some other connection (e.g. subject matter, location) with New Zealand or the Pacific region. While many established names appear in Landfall, it is always eager to find exciting work from new writers.
Instructions to Authors
Guidelines for Submissions All works submitted must be unpublished in New Zealand. Writers should submit no more than 6 poems, or three short stories or articles, at a time. Work submitted must be typed and double spaced. Prose contributions should be accompanied by an accurate word count. Submissions MUST be accompanied by a stamped, self-addressed envelope, or international reply coupon (in the case of overseas submissions), and a letter that includes the date of submission and your contact details. Landfall tries to turn around submissions within 12-16 weeks of receipt. Deadlines for submissions are 10 January for the May issue and 10 July for the November issue. Landfall encourages writers to look at recent back issues before submitting work.
On acceptance for publication, work should be supplied on disk or by email attachment (Macintosh or PC-format acceptable, preferably as Word 5, 5.1 or 6 or rich text format documents). Contributions are paid for on publication at the rate of $15 per printed page. Contributors receive a gratis copy of the issue in which their work appears.
Address submissions to: The Editor, Landfall, University of Otago Press, PO Box 56, Dunedin, New Zealand.
Editorial Board Editors Jacob Edmond teaches modern and contemporary poetry in the Department of English at the University of Otago. With Hilary Chung, he edited and translated Unreal City: A Chinese Poet in Auckland (2006) by Yang Lian. To come: a book on cross-cultural encounter in contemporary poetry. Gregory OBrien lives in Wellington. His recent books are News of the Swimmer Reaches Shore and A Nest of Singing Birds; 100 Years of the School Journal (both 2007). He recently curated major exhibitions which are being toured nationally by City Gallery Wellington. Evgeny Pavlov teaches Russian and German at the University of Canterbury. Recent books include: a monograph on the autobiographical writings of Walter Benjamin and Osip Mandelstam, an English translation of Arkadii Dragomoshchenkos novel Kitaiskoe solntse (Chinese Sun) and an anthology of NZ poetry in Russian translations Zemlia morei (Land of Seas) (co-edited with Mark Williams). Ian Wedde is a writer based in Wellington. His most recent books are Making Ends Meet: Essays and Texts 1992¨C2004, Three Regrets and a Hymn to Beauty (both 2005), and The Viewing Platform: A Novel (2006). A new novel, Chinese Opera, is on the way and a book about the artist Bill Culbert.
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