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Intersecting Energies (call for submissions)-archive

by Anne Elvey

Intersecting Energies: Location, Gender and Climate

edited by Anne Elvey

Bendigo, March 2016, photo by Anne Elvey

For the Wangan and Jangalingou Family Council, Adani and government are undermining native title. The Stop Adani campaign network has highlighted slogans such as ‘Coal versus Coral’. On the day this call for submissions opens, thousands upon thousands of school students and their supporters across Australia have marched to call for climate justice in the School Strike 4 Climate.

Marshall Islander, Kathy Jetnil-Kijiner, standing before the UN, summons her persona as mother to address her young child in ‘Dear Matafele Peinem’ [youtube https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DJuRjy9k7GA%5D

Eunice Andrada evokes location and neglect due to distance in her poem ‘Pacific Salt’

[youtube https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TyBH9GtUVM8?start=70%5D

Is climate change the overarching challenge of our time?

How do location and gender intersect in climate change poetics?

In this issue, I invite poems that consider intersections of climate change with gender and location, both physical place and the way location refers to experiences of race, class, ability and sexuality. What might be anti-colonial, queer, feminist, counter-classist, embodied poetries of climate change? How might the intersecting and sometimes distancing locations of climate change experience and politics be reimagined in resistant and enlivening ecological poetries that recollect embodied locatedness?

I am interested not in didactic poems telling the reader what to think about climate change but in poems that potentially shift the reader’s perspective, that have the capacity to – in Paul Celan’s terms – ‘turn the breath’, in a world where atmosphere (another kind of breath) and much else that depends on it are at stake.

Submissions were open from 15 March 2019 to 1 May 2019

Anne Elvey is managing editor of Plumwood Mountain journal. She is editor of hope for whole: poets speak up to Adani (2018) and author of White on White (Cordite 2018) and Kin (FIP  2014). Her scholarly work spans ecological hermeneutics, ecological feminism, biblical literature, the material turn in cultural studies, and religious responses to climate change. See further: https://anneelvey.wordpress.com/


Submissions Guidelines (please follow these closely)

In one email, send up to 3 poems in Times New Roman 12pt font, 1.5 spacing with each poem as a separate attachment. Each poem should be no longer than 50 lines or 2 pages (where your poem is in a form such that line length is not relevant). Poems should not be previously published, but simultaneous submissions are allowed. Please let the managing editor know if your poem is accepted elsewhere. Poems should be submitted as .docx, .doc, or .rtf files (send visual poems as both .pdf and .jpg.) to: submissions.plumwoodmountain@gmail.com .

Submissions are read anonymously. Do not include your name or contact details on the poems themselves, and please delete personal information from your electronic file properties. Include email contact details and a brief (50 word) bio in the body of your email. Also include your postcode if you are resident in Australia. This will not be published.


Plumwood Mountain also publishes book reviews and photo essays.

Book reviews should be 800 – 1000 words in length unless otherwise agreed. We do not accept unsolicited book reviews. See our Notes for Reviewers, also the list of available books. To read previous reviews visit the Book Reviews page. If you would like to review one of the books listed or would like to suggest a book to review, please contact the managing editor
info.plumwoodmountain@gmail.com 

Style for reviews: Times New Roman, left justified, 1.5 spacing, with endnotes, or author-date, and bibliography, following Chicago Manual of Style.

All reviews should be submitted as .docx, .doc, or .rtf files by email to
submissions.plumwoodmountain@gmail.com

For multimedia, photographic essays, sound recordings and visual art, please first discuss the submission process and formatting with the managing editor at
info.plumwoodmountain@gmail.com

From December 2017 Plumwood Mountain is no longer considering unsolicited scholarly essays or creative prose. From time to time, there may be calls for such genres.

Copyright of poems, artwork, articles and reviews remains with the contributor.

Payment

Australian-based poets whose work is selected for the August 2019 issue of Plumwood Mountain journal, from this general call for submissions, will be paid a minimum of $50 per poem.

We are grateful for the support of Copyright Agency Cultural Fund that enabled payment of Australian-based poets for the August 2018 and February 2019 issues of the journal. This funding has also enabled poetry editors in addition to commission a small number of poems for the February and August 2019 issues.

Plumwood Mountain: An Australian Journal of Ecopoetry and Ecopoetics

ISSN 2203-4404

An Australian and international
journal of ecopoetry and ecopoetics.

Plumwood Mountain Journal is created on the unceded lands of the Gadigal and Wangal people of the Eora Nation. We pay our respects to all Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people, and to elders past, present and future. We also acknowledge all traditional custodians of the lands this journal reaches.

© ALL RIGHTS RESERVED