editors contributors links about back issues submissions
submissions (for summer, issue no. 9)
"Our sense of beauty was shaped by evolution to embody an awareness of what is difficult as opposed to easy, rare as opposed to common, costly as opposed to cheap, skillful as opposed to talentless, and fit as opposed to unfit."
S
ubmit:
Smart, sexy, hip-ish, creative pieces on the brain, psychology, philosophy, art, religion, spirituality, anthropology, evolutionary theory, evolutionary psychology, neurophilosophy, sociobiology, love, sex, culture, memetics, ad infinitum. We accept work that isn't sexy, sometimes, but it is always smart. (The reverse is not true, i.e., we don't accept sexy work that's not smart!) All ideas and proposals and thoughts and memes are welcome!
Send
work (other than poetry) for Summer issue (No.9) of Entelechy: Mind & Culture, with a brief cover letter to: andrewsa@newpaltz.edu (Alice Andrews, editor).
Submit any time:maximum length: 4,000 words/22 pages (double-spaced).
I
n the Subject line of your email, write the title of your work(s).Submit your work as a Word document (preferred).
Simultaneous submissions are fine, but please no previously published work.
Notification (either way) in May.
Important formatting guidelines for prose:
Please, instead of tabs and indentations, keep all paragraphs flush-left with a space between them. (See this piece for an example.)
Instead of double-dashes and en-dashes,
use — when appropriate — the em-dash. (Entelechy's style is to give the em-dash space on either side.)
Send poetry (for Summer issue (No. 9) of Entelechy: Mind & Culture, with a brief cover letter to:
horvathon@aol.com (Tim Horvath, poetry editor).
Submit any time:
maximum length: 5
pages; 3 poems.In Subject line, write
the title of your poem(s).Submit your poem(s) in the body of an email.
Simultaneous submissions are fine, but please no previously published work.
Notification (either way) in May.
For artwork, a link to a website is preferable, but up to 3 jpegs is okay, too.
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photo: rick lange
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Tim Horvath | Poetry Editor
Tim Horvath received his MA in English Education
from Teachers College, Columbia University, and will
soon finish his MFA in Creative Writing at the University of
New Hampshire. He taught high school English for nine years,
and currently teaches Creative Nonfiction at UNH. Tim's
story
"The Understory" won the 2006 Raymond Carver Prize
sponsored by
Carve Magazine, and has been nominated for a
Pushcart Prize. His interest in cognitive neuroscience and
evolutionary psychology has led him to give talks at
various conferences, including ones with Jason Ronstadt on
the dreaming brain and literature. His novel-in-progress,
currently entitled Goodbye in Many Languages,
involves conservatory musicians, goth kids, chemists,
potters, alienated actors, and rhesus monkeys. His stories
have been published or are forthcoming in pacificREVIEW,
Seventh Quark, The Journal of Caribbean
Literatures, Cranky, and The Abiko Annual.
He can be found at
www.timhorvath.com.
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Copyright © 2006 Entelechy: Mind & Culture. New Paltz, NY. All rights reserved.