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Arc's mission is to nurture and promote composition and appreciation of poetry in Canada and abroad, with particular but not exclusive emphasis on poetry written by Canadians. In addition to publishing and distributing the work of poets, Arc Poetry Magazine organizes and administers awards, contests, public readings and other events. [4]
He became a Canadian citizen in 1973. He was co-founder, and editor, of Arc Poetry Magazine, [3] and taught for many years at Carleton University. [4] His work appeared in The Antigonish Review, [5] among other journals, and he is a member of the Writers' Union of Canada. [6]
His poetry and literary criticism has appeared in Arc Poetry Magazine, Antigonish Review, Canadian Forum, Canadian Literature, CVII, Descant, ECW, The Fiddlehead, Prism, Quarry, Rampike, RUNE (of which he was a founding editor for its decade of existence), Scrivener, Writ and many other literary journals since 1974.
She is also the winner of an Arc Poetry Magazine Poem of the Year Award, [8] a finalist for The Malahat Review Long Poem Prize, [9] and was a finalist for the 2006 Bronwen Wallace Memorial Award. She lives on Prince Edward Island. The Work was shortlisted for the Governor General's Award for English-language poetry at the 2024 Governor General ...
He was editor and publisher of a number of literary magazines, including The Camrose Review (later The Dinosaur Review), [6] The NeWest ReView, [7] and Arc Poetry Magazine, as well as of the chapbook press Sidereal Press. [8] As a musician, he plays guitar and mandolin in the band Call Me Katie. [9]
American River Review is a literary journal, first published in 1984, by students and faculty of American River College (ARC). An entirely student-produced magazine, [1] the faculty at ARC facilitate in the financial and legal facets of production. Students are responsible for every creative aspect of production including writing, editing ...
A third collection of poetry, The Departure, was published by Salt in 2012. Emery's poetry is characterised by a dystopian vision of the world, the use of varied personae, an exuberant vocabulary, black humour and dramatic changes in register and tone. His work can shift between mainstream poetics and wild experimentation, often combining both ...
"Circumstantial evidence of the visitation of angels", We All Begin in a Little Magazine: Arc and the Promise of Canada's Poets 1978-1988, Arc Poetry Society/Carleton University Press, 1988, p. 112 "The Threshold Stone", Ariel: A Review of International English Literature, University of Calgary, p. 129