| Submission Guidelines |
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| by Administrator |
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We will not accept submissions until May 2009. We have not lost our optimism! We just ran out of time! And we are drowning in text! From now on we'll only read checks!
When we will read anything besides checks, money orders, or cash again, we will be looking at stories, broken language of the heart and loins (i.e, poetry), letters, reports from obscure places where you traveled for unclear reasons, news, and gossip, mixed genre media with collage, music, sound, and web-wide effects. We prefer works of malignant brilliance to well-practiced euphonies, practical utopianism, sexual delirium, and resolute enmity against mediocrity, which is preaching to the choir. We repeat: mediocrity is preaching to the choir. We don't mind listening to the choir on TV, but we won't have it in our house. Would-be contributors (when we read again) should look up previous issues of Exquisite Corpse for an idea of how we cause damage and promote health. Our contributors have included superstars such as James Broughton, Allen Ginsberg, William Burroughs, Edouard Roditi, and Ted Berrigan, all of whom have now gone supernova, but are currently serving on our Inner Governing Board. Living greats, such as Anselm Hollo, Mike Topp, Kirby Olson, Mauricio Montiel, Teresa Bergen and Robin Becker, are frequent contributors. On the other hand, we love new writers. BWe used to, anyway. Be advised that the Corpse may start up its historic Body Bag again at any moment. If the work/s should be published in the future, we ask only for a credit line that reads: "First published in Exquisite Corpse #__." Our Webmaster's Rules (in his own, clear formulation): 1. Text Attachments: For your submission to be considered, it must be sent digitally either in the body of your email or as an attachment with extension .rtf (Rich Text Format). Almost all word processing programs on Mac and PC include the option to "save as" Rich Text Format. This format will preserve your formatting, and guarantees that the file will be compatible with all of our computers. See instructions below for directions on how to create .rtf files in MS Word. In the case of complex formatting, image embedding, layering, and other visual effects, please attach a .pdf version of your submission along with the .rtf file to ensure that the exact layout is preserved. Before you export your .pdf, convert the main text of your artwork to 10pt. Georgia. Embedded images: If you are unable to generate .pdf files but still wish to send a submission with embedded images (illustrations), you can submit in MS Word *.doc format, placing the images where you want them to appear in the published version. If you choose this option, remember to attach all the images used in the text as separate file attachments to your submission email. Important: Some common word processors justify lines to the effect that users are often moved to separate sentences with more than one space. Before you send us your work, make absolutely sure that your sentences are separated by only one space. Note: You need not send an attachment if you are just sending a quick e-mail or comment in the heat of passion! Note to poets: If you wish to make use of long single lines, please browse our site for an idea about the longest line our presentation will allow. 1. a. How to save your document as Rich Text Format from MS Word (It is a similar process in Worperfect) :
1. b. How to send attachments in Windows and Macintosh:
2. Contact Information: All submissions must have all of your contact information listed within the attachment as well as on the letter it is attached to. If your contact information is not in the attachment, we will not know who wrote the piece. 3. Footnotes, Annotations, End Notes and the Like: Using footnotes does not work for us; they do not always arrive as the writer intended them, and superscripting causes awkward spacings between lines when work is placed on html templates. Therefore, please convert all footnotes into End Notes by simply putting parentheses around the number which follows whatever you are noting. Then, at the end of your piece, write "End Notes" and list your notes. For an example of the way we like our End Notes, go to http://corpse.org/archives/issue_8/foreign_desk/woods.htm and take a look. 4. Dashes, Em dashes, Hyphens: Ideally, your submission should make proper use and differentiate between the em dash, en dash, and hyphen. Do not put spaces before or after an em dash. Always put spaces before after an en dash unless used as a long hyphen. If you have used the double dash (--) in your work, we will assume that you meant to use the em dash (or long dash) and convert accordingly. since these characters are often replaced by hyphens when they go through computer translations, thus causing occasional editorial confusion and misprints. 5. Page Limit: All submissions must contain no more than 15 double-spaced pages for prose. Poetry, however, can be single-spaced, but should not surpass 10 pages per submission. We will occasionally make exceptions for essays of greater length.
6. Images: Art submissions should be sent in JPEG (preferably at 80% quality or higher), compressed TIFF, or lossless GIF format (recommended for greyscale images and line art). If you have sent us a low-resolution preview, we may and probably will request a higher resolution copy should we decide to use your piece. 8. Music/Sound: Send CDs through the mail (below). 9. After Publication Changes: If you notice a mistake in anything published by the Corpse--in somebody else's work or your own--we do have the luxury of making these corrections. Just drop a line to This e-mail address is being protected from spam bots, you need JavaScript enabled to view it . 10. Snail Mail: We do not accept papyrus-based submissions anymore. However, if you would like us to review a book, CD, chapbook, journal, video, send it to: Editors Send submissions to: This e-mail address is being protected from spam bots, you need JavaScript enabled to view it |
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