We’re still reading, but closing in on final selections for our April issue, so send us your best–poetry, fiction, creative nonfiction.
Website: http://www.heartwoodlitmag.com/
Guidelines: http://www.heartwoodlitmag.com/submit/

We’re still reading, but closing in on final selections for our April issue, so send us your best–poetry, fiction, creative nonfiction.
Website: http://www.heartwoodlitmag.com/
Guidelines: http://www.heartwoodlitmag.com/submit/

January 8, 2017
Make art inspired by the hands of the ancestors.
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“A 6,200-year-old indigo-blue fabric from Huaca, Peru has been found by a researcher, making it one of the oldest-known cotton textiles in the world and the oldest known textile decorated with indigo blue.”
https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2016/09/160914150426.htm

1/7/2017
White snow, black treeline. Make art that’s a study in contrasts.

CALL FOR SUBMISSIONS
OUT OF MANY MAGAZINE
founded by writers at Vanderbilt University, is seeking fiction, poetry, nonfiction, and art. We are especially eager to read pieces with multi–cultural elements. Submission is free, and response times are low. We publish regularly online and quarterly in print.
For details, visit outofmanymag.com.
1/3/2017
Make art about kitchen utensils, about inheriting utensils, about replacing utensils.

1/4/2017
Make art about bones breaking, literal or as a metaphor.

1/5/2017
Make art inspired by an x-ray.

1/6/2017
Make art about restricted motion, limited movement.

12/18/2016
Re-envision a fable in a contemporary way, The Emperor Has No Clothes, for example.

12/19/2016
Remember that old game Telephone? Make are where a truth is twisted until it’s unrecognizable.

12/20/2016
Make art about travel planning.

12/21/2016
Make art about needles and pins.

12/22/2016
Make art digging a hole.

12/23/2016
Make art about bread baking.

12/24/2016
Make art about finishing something last minute.

12/25/2016
Make art what you see in a baby’s eyes.

Max 🙂 Photograph by J Hackett
12/26/2016
Make art about the last flicker of a candle.

12/27/2016
Make art inspired by what’s left over.

12/28/2016
Make art about cleaning up the debris.

12/29/2016
Make art about passive resistance.

12/30/2016
I’ve been working a lot lately with Archetypes, particularly the Maiden/Mother/Crone.
Pick an archetype and portray it in contemporary, unexpected circumstances.

12/31/2016
Make art inspired by the song stuck in your head.

1/1/2017
Make art about piecing things together.

1/ 2/ 2017
Make art about deliberately putting something on repeat.

Thrilled and honored to start 2017 with my work being featured in MockingHeart Review, and to be in such good company there ![]()
Thanks and Love to the fabulous Clare L. Martin for her beautiful spirit and hard work
and for including me in her great journal ![]()
Check out MockingHeart Review, Volume 1 Issue 2 here!
17 December 2016
One of my undergrad degrees is in Anthropology, and the gift of that, the ability to view ‘us’ through the detailed and complex lens I learned from my amazing professors in that field still, every day, shapes the way I move through the world.
I first discovered Anthropology in the library as a child, those trips we made to get books every weekend with my mama, and one of the things I first loved about the anthropology books I found was that, in those books, I found women–not as subjects (although that fascinated me too)–but as the authors, as the experts: Ruth Benedict, Margaret Mead, Jane Goodall. They were who I imagined myself to be as I “excavated’ arrrowheads and shark teeth from the plowed up tobacco field beside the trailer park where I lived as a child.
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“It is these undeniable qualities of human love and compassion and self-sacrifice that give me hope for the future. We are, indeed, often cruel and evil. Nobody can deny this. We gang up on each one another, we torture each other, with words as well as deeds, we fight, we kill. But we are also capable of the most noble, generous, and heroic behavior.”
―Jane Goodall, British primatologist, ethologist, anthropologist, and UN Messenger of Peace
“As the traveler who has once been from home is wiser than he who has never left his own doorstep, so a knowledge of one other culture should sharpen our ability to scrutinize more steadily, to appreciate more lovingly, our own.”~Margaret Mead, American cultural anthropologist and author
“I gambled on having the strength to live two lives, one for myself, and one for the world.”~ Ruth Benedict, American anthropologist and folklorist
Make art inspired by anthropology, by an anthropological discovery.

WILDNESS: Call for Submissions
Submissions accepted year-round.
WILDNESS is an online literary journal that seeks to promote contemporary fiction, poetry, and nonfiction that evokes the unknown. Founded in 2015, each thoughtfully compiled issue strives to unearth the works of both established and up-and-coming writers. For submission guidelines visit readwildness.com/submit or email submissions@readwildness.com
Website: http://readwildness.com/
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