FICTION / NONFICTION — MARCH 2022

Summer 2022 The VONA Experience

VONA

DEADLINE: March 4, 2022, by 11:59pm PST

ENTRY FEE: $35

INFO: The VONA Experience is a spectacular week of writing workshops, professional development, panels, and community building designed for writers of color (June 27, 2022 - July 3, 2022).

TUITION:

  • Workshop: $1,000

  • Residency: $1,200

WORKSHOPS INCLUDE:

  • Poetry Residency with Adrian Castro - This workshop will be conducted focusing on writing about place. We will examine poems both from workshop participants and other poets that exemplify the use of place. We will also ask where is that place? Where is that physical place, that geographical place, and also where is that mental place? Is that place existent, nostalgic, dreamt, etc.? Participants will bring to the workshop poems with these themes. Feedback will be given based on the Liz Lerhman method, which focuses feedback beginning from the artist place of inspiration and creative space, then from the reader’s/listener’s perspective—i.e. what the reader thought, felt, assimilated while reading the poem. Lastly poets will be encouraged to appropriately render their poems out aloud—from their voice, their perspective, their place.

    Adrian Castro is a poet, performer, and interdisciplinary artist. Born in Miami from Caribbean heritage which has provided fertile ground for the rhythmic Afro-Caribbean style in which he writes and performs. He is the author of Cantos to Blood and Honey, Wise Fish, Handling Destiny (all Coffee House Press). He has been published in many literary anthologies. He is the recipient of many awards and fellowships including from the Academy of American Poets and USA Knight Fellowship for Writing. He is also a Doctor of Acupuncture and Oriental Medicine practicing in Miami.

  • Prose Residency with Reyna Grande - The prose residency mainly consists of individual conferences with the instructor. The conferences are designed for the instructor to give intense individual attention to the student’s work (this is not a workshop where students critique each other’s work). The topics of the noontime daily classes will include material on the writing process, on race and creative writing, and on narrative structures and other techniques in fiction and memoir. Students will be asked to do readings and some writing before the residency begins.

    Reyna Grande is the author of the bestselling memoir, The Distance Between Us, (2012) and the sequel, A Dream Called Home (2018). Reyna has received an American Book award, the El Premio Aztlán Literary Award, and the International Latino Book Award. She was a finalist for the National Book Critics Circle Awards and honored with a Luis Leal Award for Distinction in Chicano/Latino Literature. Reyna has two forthcoming books in 2022: A Ballad of Love and Glory (March 15), her first historical fiction set during the Mexican-American War, and Somewhere We Are Human: Authentic Voices on Migration, Survival, and New Beginnings (June 7), an anthology of essays, poems, and artwork by and about undocumented Americans.

  • Narrative Journalism/Memoir with Roberto Lovato - This workshop is designed to explore the form and techniques of a genre whose fluid, malleable boundaries, its dynamism, and, especially, its focus on truth conditions and identity make it an ideal instrument for exploration in times of such astonishing uncertainty and confusion: narrative journalism. The filter through which we’ll study the choices made by narrative journalists are some of the defining elements of creative nonfiction, including bodily writing; scene and summary, voice, structure, and character. We will pay close attention to the choices made by writers engaged in the struggle to tell truthful stories in an age of epic, technologically-enabled lying.

    Roberto Lovato is the author of Unforgetting (Harper Collins), a “groundbreaking” memoir the New York Times picked as an “Editor’s Choice” Newsweek listed Lovato’s memoir as a “must-read” 2020 book and the Los Angeles Times listed it as one of its 20 Best Books of 2020. Lovato is also an educator, journalist, and writer based at The Writers Grotto in San Francisco, California. A recipient of a reporting grant from the Pulitzer Center, Lovato has reported on numerous issues—violence, terrorism, the drug war, and the refugee crisis—from Mexico, Venezuela, El Salvador, Dominican Republic, Haiti, France, and the United States, among other countries.

  • Fiction with Mathangi Subramanian - What are the stories you want to tell that are unlike anything that has been told before? What are your fears about creating and sharing original work with our capitalist, white supremacy culture? How does your inner editor work with existing power structures to stifle your voice? In this workshop, we will explore our choices about perspective, tense, character, and setting, while also developing self-care-based revision techniques that allow us to bring our whole selves to the page. Students will receive feedback from the instructor as well as small critique groups within the class.

    Mathangi Subramanian is an award winning South Asian American author, educator, mother, and musician. Her novel A People's History of Heaven was a finalist for the Lambda Literary Awards and was longlisted for the PEN/Faulkner and the Center for Fiction First Novel Prize. Her middle grades book Dear Mrs. Naidu won the South Asia Book Award and was a finalist for The Hindu-Goodbooks Award. Her essays and op-eds have appeared in The Washington Post, Harper's Bazaar, The San Francisco Chronicle, Ms., and Al Jazeer America, among others. A former public school teacher, Assistant Vice President at Sesame Workshop, and senior policy analyst for the New York City Council, she holds a doctorate in education from Columbia University Teachers College.

  • Poetry with Cynthia Dewi Oka - This workshop engages with how displacement as a tactic of conquest alienates the displaced across time, place, language, and modes of identity. What does it mean to recover and to speak to/from/as our Othered selves? In this workshop, we will study, generate, and workshop poems through the lens of exile and errantry (in contrast/opposition to empire), as conceptualized by the poet and philosopher Edouard Glissant. Participants will be provided with and required to read Glissant's essay, “Errantry, Exile” from his book Poetics of Relation in preparation.

    Cynthia Dewi Oka is the author of Fire Is Not a Country (2021) and Salvage (2017) from Northwestern University Press, and Nomad of Salt and Hard Water (2016) from Thread Makes Blanket Press. A recipient of the Amy Clampitt Residency, Tupelo Quarterly Poetry Prize, and the Leeway Transformation Award, her writing has appeared in The Atlantic, POETRY, Academy of American Poets, Poetry Society of America, Hyperallergic, Guernica, The Rumpus, ESPNW, and elsewhere. An alumnus of the Warren Wilson MFA Program for Writers, she has taught creative writing at Bryn Mawr College and New Mexico State University, and with arts organizations such as Blue Stoop, Asian Arts Initiative, The Speakeasy Project, Kundiman, and the Ubud Writers and Readers Festival. 

  • Comedy Writing with Zahra Noorbakhsh - Whether it’s in storytelling, stand-up, or essay, dialogue, prose, or a performance, we’re all funny some of the time. But, how do we make it happen on purpose, and often? How do we walk the line between comedy and drama? When do we take criticism and when do we tell critics to shove it? What are the tools and techniques that deliver laughs and how do we innovate in the genre? All attendees will leave with the fundamentals and guidance to master humor. Get ready to play and ready to work!

    Zahra Noorbakhsh is a comedian, writer, and performer. Her award-winning podcast, #GoodMuslimBadMuslim was deemed a must-listen by O, the Oprah Magazine, and invited to the Obama Whitehouse to record an episode. She’s a Senior Fellow on Comedy for Social Change with the Pop Culture Collaborative and an Innovations Fellow with The Opportunity Agenda. Her one-woman show, “All Atheists are Muslim” originally directed by W. Kamau Bell, was dubbed a highlight of the International New York City Fringe Theater Festival by the New Yorker. Her comedy special, “On Behalf of All Muslims” debuts this year. Visit ZahraComedy.com.

  • Playwriting with Lisa Marie Rollins - This workshop’s focus is centered on supporting the development of your new play in progress. Part generative, part workshop, we will spend time with focused exercises to explore and articulate the imagined realm of your play, and time will be spent reading and attending to the worlds created inside your individual scripts. We’ll ask questions about worldmaking for the stage, and spend time discussing place, conflict, character, endings and explore the uses of a non-linear /nontraditional structures to support the needs of your play.

    Lisa Marie Rollins is a freelance director, writer and new play developer. She is currently developing her new play LOVE IS ANOTHER COUNTRY. She is a Sundance Institute Theatre Lab Fellow (Directing), a Directors Lab Westmember and an Associate Member of Stage Directors and Choreographers. Lisa Marie recently received the WallaceGerbode Special Award in the Arts commission in which she will be working with Crowded Fire Theater to write and develop a new play to world premiere in Fall 2023. She was an Artistic Associate for Intiman Theater in Seattle (20-21) and is currently a Resident Artist with Crowded Fire Theater.

  • Political Content in Journalism with Teresa Wiltz - This workshop will focus on exploring race and culture as political content in Journalism. You will spend time revising and refining articles infused that elevate racial and cultural issues. Participants will receive faculty and peer feedback as they prepare a piece to pitch major market outlets like The Guardian, Mother Jones, and Essence.

    Teresa Wiltz, is the author of The Real America: The Tangled Roots of Race and Identity. A Senior Editor at POLITICO magazine, Teresa launched The Recast last year, a biweekly newsletter unpacking how race and identity are shaking up politics. As a staff writer on the Chicago Tribune’s metro news desk, she was part of a reporting team that won the Grand Prize, Robert Kennedy Journalism Award for a series on murdered children in Chicago; the team also was a finalist for the Pulitzer Prize for Public Service. During a decade at the Post, Teresa wrote for the paper’s acclaimed Style section, with a focus on cultural criticism.

vonavoices.org/summer-2022-workshops-open

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CALL FOR SUBMISSIONS: ‘DIASPORA’ ISSUE

Lampblack Lit

DEADLINE: March 14, 2022

INFO: Lampblack, an organization created by Black writers to support all Black writers, is accepting submissions of previously unpublished poetry, prose, and criticism for their DIASPORA issue.

Submit no more than 5 pages of poetry or 10 pages of prose via email to magazine@lampblacklit.com

lampblacklit.com/submissions

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Writers in Residence

Hedgebrook

DEADLINE: March 14, 2022

INFO: Hedgebrook is on Whidbey Island, about thirty-five miles northwest of Seattle. Situated on 48-acres of forest and meadow facing Puget Sound, with a view of Mount Rainier, the retreat hosts writers from all over the world for fully-funded residencies of two to four weeks (travel is not included and is the responsibility of the writer to arrange and pay for). This residency is open to women-identified writers 18 and older.

Central to what we do, our Writer-in-Residence Program supports fully-funded residencies for selected women-identified writers at the retreat each year. Up to 6 writers can be in residence at a time, each housed in a handcrafted cottage. They spend their days in solitude – writing, reading, taking walks in the woods on the property or on nearby Double Bluff beach. In the evenings, “The Gathering” is a social time for residents to connect and share over their freshly prepared meals.

Hedgebrook’s mission is to support visionary women writers whose stories and ideas shape our culture now and for generations to come. Residents must be willing to adhere to a specific set of health and safety protocols we have implemented to keep writers, staff, and surrounding communities safer. We will be following CDC and local government guidelines and recommendations for travel and in-person gathering restrictions.

Residencies for this application cycle, Cycle 1, will take place February - June 2023.

2023 WiR Genres for Cycle One:

  • Fiction

  • Non-Fiction

  • Playwriting

  • Poetry

  • Screenwriting/TV Writing

  • Songwriting

hedgebrook.org/writers-in-residence

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Falling in Love & Moments with Food

For the Culture Food Mag

DEADLINE: March 14, 2022

INFO: Did you fall in love over the past year? Do you and your (new) love have special moments involving food? For example, our creative director goes on car picnics with her significant other. Our editor in chief likes to meet her favorite suitors in a park for cocktails or a meal. Maybe you and your love pick a day of the week to cook something special together.

Tell us about your love-centered moments in food beyond the walls of a restaurant. How has food played a role in your new love? Is there an ingredient or recipe you've fallen in love with using? What do you and your lover enjoy feeding each other? Do you have an erotic culinary ritual?

To submit your pitch for the story you would like to write, or email us at fortheculturemagazineny@gmail.com.

We're looking for stories that are 300-800 words. For the Culture pays a flat rate of $250 for all articles published.

For the Culture is a biannual printed food magazine that celebrates Black women and femmes in food and wine. The stories in For the Culture are about Black women throughout the diaspora, written by Black women and photographed and illustrated by Black women. It is the first magazine of its kind.

fortheculturefoodmag.com/submit

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Raz-Shumaker Book Prize: SHORT FICTION & POETRY

Prairie Schooner

DEADLINE: March 15, 2022

ENTRY FEE: A $25 processing fee must accompany each submission, payable to Prairie Schooner.

INFO: The Prairie Schooner Raz-Shumaker Book Prize Series welcomes manuscripts from all living writers, including non-US citizens, writing in English. Both unpublished and published writers are welcome to submit manuscripts. However, we will not consider manuscripts that have previously been published, which includes self-publication. Writers may enter both contests (poetry and fiction).

Simultaneous submissions are accepted, but we ask that you notify us immediately if your manuscript is accepted for publication somewhere else. No past or present paid employee of Prairie Schooner or the University of Nebraska Press or current faculty or student at the University of Nebraska will be eligible for the prizes.

PRIZES: Winners will receive $3000 and publication through the University of Nebraska Press.

MANUSCRIPT: We prefer that fiction manuscripts be at least 150 pages long and poetry manuscripts at least 50 pages long. Novels are not considered; we will consider manuscripts comprised either entirely of short stories or one novella along with short stories (please do not send a single novella or a collection of novellas). Manuscripts may contain stories or poems that have been published in journals or in chapbook form; however, if the full-length manuscript includes work from a previously published chapbook, the majority of the manuscript must be additional work not appearing in the chapbook. Prairie Schooner accepts electronic submissions as well as hard copy submissions. Please see below for further formatting guidelines and the link to submit electronically.

HARD COPY SUBMISSIONS: The author’s name should not appear on the manuscript. All entries will be read anonymously. Please include two cover pages: one listing only the title of the manuscript, and the other listing the author’s name, address, telephone number, and email address. An acknowledgements page listing the publication history of individual stories or poems may be included, if desired. No application forms are necessary.

For hard copy submissions, photocopies are acceptable. Please do not bind manuscripts with anything other than a binder clip or rubber band. Please include a self-addressed postage-paid postcard for confirmation of manuscript receipt. Please use a standard postcard—small index cards will not be accepted by the U.S. Postal Service. A stamped, self-addressed business size envelope must accompany the submission for notification of results. No manuscripts will be returned. All manuscripts that do not win will be recycled.

ELECTRONIC SUBMISSIONS: The author’s name should not appear anywhere on the manuscript. All entries will be read anonymously. An acknowledgements page listing the publication history of individual stories or poems may be included, if desired. No application forms are necessary.

NOTIFICATION: Winners will be announced on this website on or before July 15, 2022. Results will be emailed or mailed shortly thereafter.

prairieschooner.unl.edu/book-prize

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Kimbilio WRITERS Retreat

Kimbilio

DEADLINE: March 15, 2022

APPLICATION FEE: $0

INFO: The eight annual Kimbilio retreat will take place on the SMU Campus in Taos, New Mexico from July 24-30, 2022.  

Become a member of a dynamic and engaged community of writers who are committed to excellence in diaspora fiction. Perks include access to Kimbilio programs such as our mentorship series, information exchange forum, and invitation to participate in our summer retreat.

Accepted participants are required to attend the entire retreat, arriving for a 5:30pm dinner meeting on the 24th and departing on the morning of the 30th, no later than noon. Tuition is covered by Kimbilio. Participants are responsible for their own transportation to/from the retreat as well as a fee that partially covers the costs for room and board with the amount varying by size of the chosen accommodation.  

The application process consists of:

•  An essay of no more than 150 words describing what attending the Kimbilio Summer Retreat means for you or what you hope to gain from the experience.

•  A 20-page, double-spaced, 12-point font manuscript of fiction (short story or novel excerpt). If submitting a novel excerpt, you may include a short summary of no more than 200 words. The summary page does not count as part of the 20-page excerpt. 

Do NOT include your name or any other identifying information in your essay or manuscript as applications are juried anonymously. [Submittable keeps track of the ownership of all submitted materials.  Manuscripts or essays including names will be disqualified from this round of submissions.]  

Acceptances are on a rolling basis so the sooner your application is received the better your chances.  

kimbiliofiction.com

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CALL FOR EVENT PROPOSALS

OutWrite

DEADLINE: March 15, 2022

INFO: OutWrite, Washington, D.C's annual free LGBTQ Literary Festival, is accepting event submissions for the 2022 festival, which will be August 5-7, 2022. We're seeking readings, panels, and workshops exploring and celebrating all aspects of the LGBTQ+ identity and literary space!

PLEASE NOTE:

  • We encourage diverse panels and readings.

  • Submit your event with as full a lineup of readers or panelists as you can. We cannot feature readings with one individual author.

  • The event coordinator refers to the person who submits the event idea.

  • We don't know yet if the 2022 festival will be in-person, hybrid, or 100% virtual, but we'll keep you updated as the situation changes.

https://docs.google.com/forms/d/e/1FAIpQLSd0PO3HkLktEEjDoh4InKyARihb9giCTyK19A65COce7UQyWg/viewform

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CALL FOR SUBMISSIONS: ‘VOZ’ ISSUE

Alebrijes Review

DEADLINE: March 15, 2022

INFO: Alebrijes Review's third issue, VOZ, will be published both online and in print! We're seeking original poetry, flash fiction, creative nonfiction, visual art, photography, and hybrid work created by Latino artists. 

The theme of VOZ primarily serves to emphasize that we are seeking work showcasing unique, impactful, or personal voices. We accept submissions of work on any subject, however please do not submit graphic sexual or violent material, and know that we do not tolerate plagiarism.

We accept pieces in English, Spanish, and Ingléspañol/Spanglish. (If you would like to submit a piece in a different language, please email your submission as an attachment to alebrijesmag@gmail.com.)

We aim to publish the issue April 2022. If accepted, we ask that you credit us as the original publisher if your piece appears elsewhere, but you will retain all rights to your work.

Please reach out to us as alebrijesmag@gmail.com if you have any questions!

alebrijesreview.com/submissions

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CALL FOR SUBMISSIONS: POETRY & PROSE

Hayden’s Ferry Review

DEADLINE: March 15, 2022

READING FEE: $3 (The fee is waived for Black writers).

INFO: Hayden's Ferry Review is the international literary journal out of Arizona State University.

GUIDELINES:

  • Please send one submission per genre at a time, and wait for a response before you submit additional work.

  • Withdraw your submission using Submittable. if you are only withdrawing a section of your work (for example: 2/5 poems), add a note to your submission.

  • Please limit your prose submissions to under 20 pages, and your poetry submissions to 6 or less poems.

  • All prose should be double-spaced.

  • Contributors receive one copy of the issue in which they appear. Additional copies may be purchased for $6 each up to 5 copies.

  • Simultaneous submissions are welcome. If your work is accepted elsewhere, please notify the editors immediately.

  • We do not accept previously published material.

  • We do not consider book-length works.

  • Submitters are strongly encouraged to read the journal before submitting: to subscribe, visit http://hfr.clas.asu.edu/store.

  • We are always open to submissions of visual art.

hfr.submittable.com/submit

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PRISMATIC ARTIVIST RESIDENCY FOR BIPOC GROUPS IN NORTH & SOUTH CAROLINA

Cypress Fund

DEADLINE: March 22, 2022

INFO: According to M.K. Asante, “[an] artivist (artist+activist) uses [their] artistic talents to fight and struggle against injustice and oppression—by any medium necessary”. Artivists and Artivist organizations/collectives are working at the intersection of art and liberation. We recognize that power of supporting Artivists throughout the Carolinas as they work to advance movement building in our core issues areas.

Cypress Fund has committed to providing 7 North and/or South Carolina-Based Organizations/Collectives whose work can be considered “artivism” with a two-year residency under our fund.  The artivists will be working on projects that engage with our 6 core issue areas, Abolition and Ending the Carceral State, Indigenous Resurgence, Gender Justice and Reproductive Justice and/or Black Liberation and Economic Justice.

The two-year residency includes:

  • 50K General Capacity Grant over 2 years 

  • 1-2 Planning and Skills-Building Retreats

  • Organizational Support from dedicated Cypress Fund staff member

  • Bi-Monthly Check-Ins 

  • Bi-Monthly Cohort Meetings

ELIGIBILITY:

To be eligible an organization or project must be:

  • BIPOC-led Organizations and/or Collectives with at least a 2-year history (Cypress Fund does not fund individuals at this time.)

  • Based in North Carolina or South Carolina. The leadership of the organization must be living in North or South Carolina.

  • Working within Cypress Fund's identified funding priorities which are Abolition and Ending the Carceral State, Indigenous Resurgence, Gender Justice and Reproductive Justice and/or Black Liberation and Economic Justice.

  • Political artists, radical storytellers, cultural organizers or social justice creatives of any artistic medium

All applicants will be notified of a decision by April 18, 2022.

cypressfund.org/prismatic1

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CALL FOR SUBMISSIONS: Issue 4 “Freedom”!

Spoken Black Girl Magazine

DEADLINE: March 25, 2022

INFO: In Spoken Black Girl Issue 4 “Freedom” we are looking for new poetry, essays, articles, short stories, novel excerpts, hybrid forms, interviews, art, illustrations, and photography around the topic of “Freedom”. 

Submissions are open to Black women, women of color, femme-identifying folks, nonbinary folks LGBTQIA+, and queer writers of color. We are looking for real-life stories, and images that speak for themselves and show a unique perspective on freedom. What do we do when we’re free? How do you express your freedom? Some suggested topics are; reproductive justice, freedom of religion/spirituality, freedom to break barriers, economic freedom, interviews about domestic violence, Black and brown infant mortality rates, freedom from stereotypes and constructs, freedom to express sexuality, sensuality & erotic freedom, sexual orientation, and gender identity. How is our freedom limited? How can we seek true freedom?

All accepted submissions will receive $75 in compensation.

spokenblackgirl.com/submit

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WORDS OF WONDER: A FELLOWSHIP FOR CHILDREN’S AUTHORS

The Writers’ Colony at Dairy Hollow

DEADLINE: March 28, 2022

APPLICATION FEE: $35

INFO: The Writers’ Colony at Dairy Hollow is pleased to offer a fellowship for writers working on a picture book for children that tells an engaging, relatable story. The successful application will demonstrate originality, creativity, and the likelihood of publication. Prior publication is not a requirement.

AWARD: Two fellowship winners will receive a two-week residency to allow the recipients to focus completely on their work. A $400 stipend will be provided to each to cover travel costs and incidentals. Each writer’s suite has a bedroom, private bathroom, separate writing space, and wireless internet. We provide uninterrupted writing time, a European-style gourmet dinner prepared five nights a week, and served in our community dining room, the camaraderie of other professional writers when you want it, and a community kitchen stocked with the basics for other meals.

Writers proposing more than one project must submit a separate application and fee for each one. The submission period opens on Friday, December 17, 2021. Deadline is midnight CST on Monday, March 28, 2022. The winners will be announced no later than April 22, 2022. Residencies must be completed by December 31, 2023. Exceptions will be made if COVID-19 makes a residency inadvisable.

https://www.writerscolony.org/fellowships

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CALL FOR SUBMISSIONS: BIPOC-ONLY ISSUE

Salt Hill Journal

DEADLINE: March 28, 2022

INFO: For their upcoming edition, Salt Hill Journal is accepting fiction, nonfiction, and poetry only from BIPOC writers.

GUIDELINES:

  • Fiction/Nonfiction: Please do not submit works of more than 30 pages, double-spaced. We accept multiple flash pieces, so long as their combined length does not exceed 30 pages

  • Poetry: Please submit no more than five poems at a time.

https://salthill.submittable.com/submit

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CALL FOR SUBMISSIONS: ‘UPSPRING’ ISSUE

Yellow Arrow Journal

DEADLINE: March 31, 2022

INFO: Yellow Arrow Journal, a biannual publication of creative nonfiction, poetry, and cover art by writers/artists that identify as women, is excited to announce submissions are now OPEN for the spring 2022 (Vol. VII, No. 1) issue on UpSpring.

Accepted submissions include creative nonfiction, poetry, and cover art by authors/artists that identify as women. Submissions must relate to the theme of UpSpring as interpreted by the author. Find the guidelines at .

COMPENSATION: If selected, you will receive $10.00 USD and a PDF of the journal issue. Note that payments are through PayPal; while we try to accommodate those that do not have a PayPal account, this is not always possible, especially for people outside of the U.S. Thank you for understanding.

yellowarrowpublishing.com/submissions

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CALL FOR SUBMISSIONS:BIRTH/MARK: TRANSRACIAL ADOPTEES’ ISSUE

Raising Mothers

DEADLINE: March 31, 2022

INFO: Raising Mothers publishes work that centers parenthood from either a parent, or child-centered perspective from BIPOC people exclusively; women, femmes, disabled, nonbinary and LGBTQIA+ parents.

For their next issue, Raising Mothers is seeking writers who are also Transracial Adoptees. Share your experience of being a child of color growing up and moving away from the gaze of whiteness. How has it shaped you? How has it informed your parenting? Have you decided against parenting because of it? Have you searched for your birth family?

They invite all forms--essays, poems, interviews, comics, etc.--from diasporic transracial adoptees (Black, Asian, Latine(x), Indigenous, and other persons of color) to add nuance to the collective narrative. Being a parent is not a requirement.

Select featured works will receive honoraria.

raisingmothers.com/submissions/#tab-92941

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2022 A Public Space Writing Fellowships

A Public Space

DEADLINE: March 31, 2022, at 11:59pm ET

APPLICATION FEE: $0

INFO: The aim of the 2022 A Public Space Writing Fellowships is to seek out and support writers who embrace risk in their work and their own singular vision. Writers who have not yet contracted to publish a book are invited to apply.

Three fellowships will be awarded. During the six-month fellowship, fellows will receive:

  • Editorial support from A Public Space editors to prepare a piece for publication in the magazine;

  • A $1,000 honorarium;

  • The opportunity to meet virtually with members of the publishing community, including agents, editors, and published writers;

  • The opportunity to participate in a public reading and conversation with A Public Space editors and contributors.

Eligibility: ​Only writers who have not yet published or been contracted to write a book-length work are eligible. International applicants are encouraged to apply, but we are only able to consider submissions in English. Only one submission per person is allowed. Please do not submit a piece you have previously submitted to A Public Space, either through the Fellowship category, the General Submissions category, or an Open Call. A Public Space reserves the right to invite submissions.

TIMELINE:

  • Submissions for the Fellowships close on March 31, 2022.

  • Successful applicants will be informed no later than May 17, 2022.

  • The fellowship period will be June 1, 2022 – November 30, 2022.


GUIDELINES:

Please submit the following:

  • A cover letter containing a one-paragraph biographical statement; one paragraph that is a favorite of yours from a book you've read, be it recently or long ago; and a brief statement telling us why this particular passage is meaningful to you.

  • One previously unpublished prose piece with a limit of 8,000 words. If selected, the piece submitted is the piece that will be published in the magazine.

  • We accept simultaneous submissions, but please note that if your piece is accepted elsewhere, you will be required to withdraw your entire application; replacement submissions will not be accepted once the deadline has passed.

apublicspace.org/news/detail/the-2022-a-public-space-writing-fellowships

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Winter 2022 Story Contest

Narrative Magazine

DEADLINE: March 31, 2022, at midnight, Pacific daylight time.

SUBMISSION FEE: $27 fee for each entry. And with your entry, you’ll receive three months of complimentary access to Narrative Backstage.

INFO: Narrative’s Winter 2022 Story Contest is open to all fiction and nonfiction writers. We’re looking for short shorts, short stories, essays, memoirs, photo essays, graphic stories, all forms of literary nonfiction, and excerpts from longer works of both fiction and nonfiction. Entries must be previously unpublished, no longer than 15,000 words, and must not have been previously chosen as a winner, finalist, or honorable mention in another contest.

As always, we are looking for works with a strong narrative drive, with characters we can respond to as human beings, and with effects of language, situation, and insight that are intense and total. We look for works that have the ambition of enlarging our view of ourselves and the world.

AWARDS:

  • First Prize: $2,500

  • Second Prize: $1,000

  • Third Prize: $500

  • Ten finalists will receive $100 each

  • All entries will be considered for publication.

All contest entries are eligible for the $4,000 Narrative Prize for 2022 and for acceptance as a Story of the Week.

JUDGING: The contest will be judged by the editors of the magazine. Winners and finalists will be announced to the public by April 30, 2022. All writers who enter will be notified by email of the judges’ decisions. The judges reserve the option to declare a tie in the selection of winners and to award only as many winners and finalists as are appropriate to the quality of work represented in the magazine. 

narrativemagazine.com/winter-2022-story-contest

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The Thousand Miles Project

Coverfly

DEADLINE: March 31, 2022

ENTRY FEE: $0

INFO: The Thousand Miles Project is open to writers who are passionate about telling Asian and Pacific Islander stories. They’re accepting Features, TV Pilots, Shorts, Web Series, Short Stories, Book/Manuscripts, Stage Plays, Graphic Novels, and Articles

We at The Thousand Miles Project are committed to h elping emerging writers tell their stories and jumpstart lasting writing careers in the entertainment industry. In partnership with Universal Content Productions (UCP) and writer/producer Soo Hugh (The Terror, Pachinko), the program will provide up to 20 writers/writing teams the opportunity to learn about television writing and the industry through panels and lectures with writers, development execs, managers, and agents in a two-day intensive virtual workshop.

After the workshop, participants will be invited to apply for a 24-week development lab by submitting a series idea for further development. Television project proposals in any genre are welcome. We are interested in narratives told through the lenses of any Asian and Pacific Islander community (all Asian or Pacific Islander countries or cultures). From those proposals, up to 3 writers/writing teams will be selected to join the development lab with Soo Hugh, her team and UCP to write a pilot script and potentially develop their project further with UCP. The lab writers will meet on a bi-weekly basis, with additional monthly meetings with Soo and her team.

BENEFITS:

Workshop Participants - Up to 20 writers/writing teams will be invited to free virtual workshops to learn about television development and career strategies from writers, showrunners, managers, agents, and studio execs. 

Virtual Workshop dates will be June 11, 2022 and June 18, 2022. 

Development Lab Writers - Workshop participants will be invited to apply for the development lab by submitting additional materials by August 1, 2022, which are currently contemplated to include:

  • Short answers to a series of questions regarding their series concept

  • An artistic statement of intent about themselves (750 words or less)

Up to 3 writers/writing teams who participated in the workshops and submitted series development ideas will be selected to participate in a 24-week paid development lab. With guidance from Soo and her team, plus peer-to-peer feedback, writers will write a pilot. Selected writers are expected to fully participate by giving support and feedback to each other in the lab.

Writers/writing teams from the lab may be invited to further develop their project with UCP after the development lab is completed.

If UCP chooses not to further develop a project from the lab, UCP will give the rights to the applicable script back to the writer/writing team (and UCP will no longer continue to own it). Further details, and an agreement, will be provided to writers/writing teams selected to participate in the lab.

ELIGIBILITY:

  • Applicants must be at least 18 years old at the time of their application.

  • Applicants can be from any country or background.

  • Applicants must have a strong proficiency in English.

  • Applicant’s participation in the 2-day workshop (and lab, if applicable) must not violate any other obligations applicant may have at law, pursuant to contract, or otherwise.

  • To participate in the development lab, applicants must be legally authorized to live, work and participate in the lab in the United States.

  • Applicants must be available to participate in the 2-day workshop and lab (if applicable): Workshop is currently scheduled for June 11, 2022 and June 18, 2022, for approximately 8 hours each day with hours based on the Pacific Time Zone. Confirmed dates and time will be provided.

  • If selected for the development lab, applicant must execute a standard writer agreement, and other required documentation, in order to participate.

  • Writing teams can be no more than 2 writers. Each writer must submit a separate application.

writers.coverfly.com/competitions/view/thousandmilesproject?fbclid=IwAR1Q-gSJSv5NkLrLB-61oXPVPF8-_ZcRUKUiicayFpdg6CjcrQf21MGYES0

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Island Voices: Caribbean Contemporary Classics Short Story Prize

Hachette UK / Hodder Education

DEADLINE: March 31, 2022

INFO: A new writing competition from Hachette UK and Hodder Education, publishers of Caribbean Contemporary Classics collection including titles such as Aunt Jen and Escape to Last Man Peak.

Island Voices: Caribbean Contemporary Classics Short Story Prize aims to discover and showcase unpublished writers from the Caribbean, or of Caribbean descent. The winning shortlist will be published in an anthology and the overall winner will receive a £1000 cash prize.

There have been many great and enduring works of literature by Caribbean authors over the last century. The Caribbean Contemporary Classics collection celebrates these deep and vibrant stories, overflowing with life and acute observations about society. The series has been given a new look and feel for 2021 onwards and includes titles from some much-loved and well-established Caribbean writers. Trevor Rhone, Curdella Forbes, Sam Selvon, Jean D’Costa, Michael Anthony, V S Reid and Paulette Ramsay are well-known Caribbean authors who have contributed to the development, recognition and identity of people of Caribbean descent around the world.

The competition will open from 15th March 2021 and the deadline for entry is 31st March 2022. The shortlist and overall winner will be selected by a panel of industry professionals and external judges and announced on 1st June 2022.

The judging panel consists of, Sharmaine Lovegrove, Publisher Dialogue Books; Mala Morton- Gittens, Curriculum Specialist; Phillipa Beckford, Retired Senior Lecturer, Shortwood Teachers College and Dr Janet Williams, Acting Head of Department, Shortwood Teachers College.

ELIGIBILITY: This competition is open to those who are Caribbean or of Caribbean descent. Entrants must be aged 18 or over and must not have an agent or have had any short story or book previously published by a publisher or self-published in whole or in part in any format or be under a contract to have their work published.

To enter, please submit a short story, of any topic, genre or style, between 2000- 5000 words and an introduction to your writing. Simply email your submission to islandvoices@hoddereducation.co.uk

hoddereducation.co.uk/media/Documents/International/Caribbean/CCC.pdf

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The 2022 Pinch Literary Awards in FICTION

The Pinch Journal

DEADLINE: March 31, 2022

ENTRY FEE: $20

INFO: The 2022 Pinch Literary Awards in fiction is now open. All entries are considered for publication. First, second, and third place winners will be selected from each category. The first place winners will be published in the Spring issue following announcement. Second and third place winners will be given high-priority consideration for publication, but because of space, cannot be guaranteed. Due to the high volume of submissions, any prize winners will be ineligible for contest participation for three years.

PRIZE: $2,000

JUDGE: SJ Sindu is a Tamil diaspora author of two literary novels, two hybrid chapbooks, and a forthcoming graphic novel. Her first novel, Marriage of a Thousand Lies, won the Publishing Triangle Edmund White Award and was a Stonewall Honor Book and a finalist for a Lambda Literary Award. Sindu’s second novel, Blue-Skinned Gods, will be published in November 2021 by Soho Press, and her graphic novel, Shakti, is forthcoming from Harper Collins. Sindu's hybrid fiction and nonfiction chapbook, I Once Met You But You Were Dead, won the Turnbuckle Chapbook contest and was published by Split/Lip Press, and her hybrid nonfiction and poetry chapbook, Dominant Genes, won the Black River Chapbook Competition and will be published in February 2022 by Black Lawrence Press. A 2013 Lambda Literary Fellow, Sindu holds an MA in English from the University of Nebraska-Lincoln and a PhD in English and Creative Writing from Florida State University. Sindu teaches at the University of Toronto Scarborough

CONTEST RULES: Only unpublished work will be considered. Simultaneous submissions are welcome, but notify us immediately if work is accepted elsewhere. No refunds will be issued. Manuscripts will not be returned. Manuscripts can be a maximum of 5000 words. You may submit entries online via the link below. Emailed entries will not be considered.

INELIGIBLE:

  • No translations will be considered.

  • Current students and faculty of The University of Memphis, as well as volunteer staff members for The Pinch, are not eligible.

ENCLOSE THE FOLLOWING WITH EACH ENTRY: 

1. $20 submission fee for each entry.

2. The following information entered into the cover letter box: name, address, phone number, and email address. The AUTHOR'S CONTACT INFORMATION SHOULD NOT APPEAR ON THE MANUSCRIPT itself. Entries that do not adhere to this policy will be DISCARDED UNREAD. Please notify us if your address or email changes.

3. Please do not title your entry "Contest," "Pinch Contest," "Entry," or anything similar. It makes it hard to find the piece that we loved and want to send up as a finalist. Please title your entry as the title of your work.

Also, please share with us in your cover letter how you learned about the Pinch Literary Awards.

pinchjournal.com/2021-pinch-literary-awards

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 2022 Page Prize in Nonfiction

The Pinch Journal

DEADLINE: March 31, 2022

ENTRY FEE: $10

INFO: The Pinch Journal is accepting nonfiction entries of up to 1,000 words for its annual Page Prize. All entries are considered for publication. The first place winners will be published in the Spring issue following announcement. Second and third place winners will be given high-priority consideration for publication, but because of space, cannot be guaranteed. Due to the high volume of submissions, any first-place prize winners are ineligible for contest participation for the three years following their win.

JUDGE: Jess Zimmerman is an editor at Quirk Books and a freelance writer of essays, fiction, and prose poetry. She was previously the editor-in-chief of Electric Literature, the founding editor of Archipelago, and a contributing editor for The Establishment. She’s the coauthor of Basic Witches (Quirk, 2017) and the author of Women and Other Monsters (Beacon, 2021). She’s also been an opinion columnist (at the Guardian) a journalist (at FactCheck.org), and a news writer (at Grist). She’s interested in puzzles, monsters, feelings, gender, nonlinear stories, cocktails, witches, magical realism, bears, dogs, unexamined assumptions, industrial music, immersive theater, smashing patriarchy, some but not all robots, Shakespeare's histories, and funny science fiction from the '70s and '80s. She lives in Brooklyn where she spends most of her time aging, feeling bad about aging, or frequently both.

CONTEST RULES: All Page Prize entries may not exceed 1,000 words, but can be less. Brevity is key. Any submission over this word limit will be automatically disqualified. Only unpublished work will be considered. Simultaneous submissions are welcome, but notify us if work is accepted elsewhere. No refunds will be issued. Manuscripts will not be returned. You may submit entries online via the link below. Emailed entries will not be considered. 

INELIGIBLE:

  • No translations will be considered.

  • Current students, and faculty of The University of Memphis are not eligible. Alumni of the University of Memphis are eligible once they've been out of school or graduated for more than five years.

  • All current staff and volunteer readers of The Pinch are ineligible. Staff members and volunteers who have not been part of the journal for at least five years are eligible.

  • Any entry over 1,000 words or that violates the blind reading policy will be ineligible.

ENCLOSE THE FOLLOWING WITH EACH ENTRY:

1. Entry Fee: $10

2. The following information entered into the cover letter box: name, address, phone number, and email address. The AUTHOR'S CONTACT INFORMATION SHOULD NOT APPEAR ON THE MANUSCRIPT itself or in the TITLE. Entries that do not adhere to this policy will be DISCARDED UNREAD. Please notify us if your address or email changes.

3. Please do not title your entry "Contest", "Pinch Contest", "CNF Essay," or anything similar to these. Please title your entry as the title of your essay. 

Also, please share with us in your cover letter how you learned about the Pinch Literary Awards.

pinchjournal.com/2021-pinch-literary-awards

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Wild Futures—2023/2024 Award Cycle

Creative Capital

DEADLINE: April 1, 2022

INFO: Creative Capital provides grants to support the creation of groundbreaking art by innovative and adventurous artists across the country. Our transformative giving approach is built on the principle that artists need funding as well as networks and professional services in order to build long-term sustainable projects and careers. Awardees have access to direct project funding up to $50,000, artist services, and a community of fellow awardees and other professionals who may provide additional support for the project. We encourage a spirit of mutual generosity among our awardees and seek to foster exchange through our retreats, workshops, and online, regional, national, and international gatherings. Over the course of a funded project, we partner with each artist to help define critical moments of development and determine how to best meet their goals.

ELIGIBILITY:

  • US citizen, permanent legal resident, or O-1 visa holder

  • At least 25 years old

  • Working artist(s) with at least 5 years of professional artistic practice

  • Applicant may not be a full-time student

  • May not apply to the Warhol Foundation Arts Writers grant program in the same year

  • May not have previously received a Creative Capital Award

  • May not be an applicant or collaborator on more than one proposed project per year

Projects are not eligible if the main purpose is:

  • Promotional

  • To fund ongoing operations of an existing business

  • The curation or documentation of existing work

2023 AWARD CYCLE TIMELINE

  • March 1 to April 1, 2022 at 4pm ET: Letter of Inquiries (LOI) accepted

  • July 2022: Notification of advancement to Round II

  • September 2022: Notification of advancement to Round III

  • January 2023: Public announcement of 2023 Creative Capital Awards

CATEGORIES:

  • Performing Arts: including dance, theatre, music, jazz, sound, non-traditional opera, multimedia performance, and socially engaged and/or sustainable performance-based practices

  • Technology: including digital art, gaming, interdisciplinary arts, AR, VR, or XR, bio art, AI, data visualization, net art, new genres, and socially engaged and/or sustainable technology-based practices

  • Literature: including fiction, poetry, nonfiction, genre-defying literary work, and socially engaged and/or sustainable text-based practices

creative-capital.org/about-the-creative-capital-award/#wildfutures

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The Orison Prizes in Poetry & Fiction 

Orison Books

DEADLINE: April 1, 2022

ENTRY FEE: $25

INFO: Each year Orison Books accept submissions of full-length poetry (50-100 pp.) and fiction (30,000 word minimum) manuscripts for The Orison Prizes in Poetry and Fiction, judged by different prominent writers each year in an anonymous judging process.

PRIZE: The winning entry in each genre will be awarded publication and a $1,500 cash prize, in addition to a standard royalties contract. Finalists will be selected by the editorial staff at Orison Books, and the winners will be selected from among the finalist manuscripts by the judges.

In the event that a judge in either genre does not select a winner from among the finalists, the Editor will select a winner. The editors also reserve the right to select no finalists, in which case all entry fees will be refunded to the entrants. All finalist manuscripts will be considered for publication under a standard royalties contract. Contest results will be announced by September 15, 2022. Winners will receive payment by October 15, 2022.

JUDGES:

  • Poetry: Rajiv Mohabir

  • Fiction: Tania James

GUIDELINES:

  • Original English work only; no translations.

  • Do not include your name anywhere in your manuscript file or file name, but only in your Duosuma cover letter.

  • Individual poems and stories or excerpts may have been previously published in periodicals and/or chapbooks, but the manuscript as a whole must not have been published in book form, whether digital or in print. Self-published manuscripts are considered previously published and are not eligible.

  • Please include any publication acknowledgments in your cover letter, listing any periodicals where individual pieces from your manuscript first appeared. Acknowledgments should not appear in the manuscript file.

  • Poetry manuscripts must be 50-100 pages of poems (each poem beginning on a new page). Fiction manuscripts must have a minimum word count of 30,000.

  • Fiction manuscripts may consist of short stories, a novel, a novella, flash/micro fiction, or any combination of forms, as long as the manuscript meets the 30,000 word minimum.

  • Existing Orison Books authors are not eligible for The Orison Prizes.

  • Simultaneous submissions are accepted; please notify us immediately should a manuscript be accepted for publication elsewhere.

  • Multiple manuscripts may be submitted; each manuscript must be accompanied by a separate entry fee.

  • Orison Books is committed to running ethical and transparent contests. Current or former students of the judge or the lead genre editor(s), or anyone with a close personal relationship with that judge or lead editor(s), are not eligible to submit in the category in question. Judges also never see author names until after they have made their selections.

  • Orison Books undertakes never to extend contest deadlines, except in the case of technical problems or other events that would prevent submitters from entering the contest by the original deadline.

  • We only accept electronic submissions, which must be sent through our Duosuma page.

duotrope.com/duosuma/submit/orison-prizes-poetry-fiction-eyhfu

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ROLLING SUBMISSIONS

ESSAYS ON RADICAL HEALING

That’s No Longer My Ministry

DEADLINE: Rolling

INFO: Hi! We’re journalists, editors and content creators Foram Mehta and Nadia Imafidon. And we’re teaming up to publish a first-of-its-kind anthology that aims to tell a different story about healing. As an extension to the evocative podcast series of the same name, the collection will tell the stories of marginalized folk in their own words about how they’re actively purging years of conditioning and the consequences of never being centered.

These stories acknowledge and move through trauma; they hold space for radical self-liberation and using “No.” as a complete sentence. They remind us: We don't have to hold onto the things that no longer serve us because that's no longer our ministry.

Publication Details

Accepted essays will be edited by us (Foram & Nadia) and curated together for a book that will be available for purchase as an e-book or as a paperback. Print copies of the book and one-hundred percent of proceeds from subsequent sales will be donated to Aakoma Project, an organization that aims to

Compensation

Writers whose essays are accepted for final publication will be credited with a byline in the book and a complimentary paperback copy of the completed anthology.

A note about writing for free: As writers ourselves, we know writers are highly underpaid and undervalued, but we also know the joy of contributing to a collaborative body of work for the sake of storytelling, for the sake of healing together. Everyone on this project (including us) is a non-paid contributor donating their time and work for the benefit of Aakoma Project.

We say this while also acknowledging that we live in a world that operates on money, and spending time to write for free is not a privilege afforded to everyone. That’s also why we’re asking for non-exclusive rights only to contributors’ essays (more details to be provided in the contributor’s agreement).

build the consciousness of youth of color and their

caregivers on the recognition and importance of mental health. They do this by offering free

therapy and workshops to youth and their families, helping to influence systems and services to

receive and address the needs of youth of color and their families.

Pitching Guidelines

We are seeking pitches for non-fiction first-person essays from people of color who hold identities that are marginalized. This includes but is not limited to:

  1. LGBTQIA+

  2. Immigrant/First-generation

  3. Refugee

  4. Indigenous

  5. People with disabilities

When submitting your pitch, please include a brief bio and a link to your portfolio and/or first-person writing samples. We understand that not everyone will have a portfolio, so please send us something to give us an idea of your writing style.

Your pitch should include:

  1. Working title

  2. A summary of your story. (Tell us why you’re the person who needs to tell this story.)

We aim to get back to everyone who submits a pitch, but please allow us some time to respond, as we anticipate a full inbox! We will send contributor agreements to writers whose pitches we accept. Please, do not submit fully written essays.

Submit pitches to nolongermyministry@gmail.com. Editorial Guidelines

After we accept your essay pitch, writers should use the following writing guidelines: ● First-person reflections

○ Use this creative, non-fiction writing guide for reference

  • ●  Non-fiction

  • ●  English (with creative use of language)

  • ●  8th grade reading level (When in doubt, keep it simple!)

  • ●  1,500-3,00 words recommended

  • ●  AP Style (reference guide)

    We’re interested in your story, but we acknowledge that your story will likely include other people in it. For that reason, we ask that if you’re mentioning someone by their name that you get their permission to do so or change the name.

thatsnolongermyministry.com/anthology?fbclid=IwAR24GQ_s4cHpXBc3mp3bjvbmdvLyxKwr4dCaz6lTgGd2zYV_YlH-KmZIvVM

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TORCH FRIDAY FEATURE

Torch Literary Arts

DEADLINE: Rolling

ENTRY FEE: $0

INFO: Torch Literary Arts welcomes submissions of original creative work by Black women writers. We are interested in work that challenges and disrupts preconceived notions of what contemporary writing by Black women should be. Your stories and poems are valuable and necessary. Write freely and submit what you are excited to share with the world.

Reading Period
Submissions are accepted for Friday Features only. We accept submissions on a rolling basis.

Simultaneous Submissions
Simultaneous submissions to other journals are welcome as long as they are identified as such and we are notified immediately upon acceptance elsewhere.

Manuscript Submission Guidelines
Include a one (1) page cover letter noting the title(s) of the work(s) submitted.

Upload your text submission as a Word (DOC, DOCX) or portable document format/PDF (PDF).

Typed, double-spaced (poetry may be single-spaced) pages. 

Numbered pages.

Margins should be set at no less than 1” and no greater than 1.5”.

Poetry: submit up to five (5) poems totaling no more than eight (8) pages.

Fiction, Hybrid genre: 12-point font. No more than ten (10) pages or 2500 words (whichever is achieved first). Excerpts of longer works are welcome if self-contained.

Drama/Screenwriting: submit one act or a collection of short scenes no longer than ten (10) pages. Excerpts of longer works are welcome if self-contained. Indicate if a performance video or dramatic audio reading will be available with the text submission if selected.

Restrictions
We do not reprint previously published work for TORCH Friday Features.

Submitting Online
We accept submissions via our online submission management system only. Submissions via postal mail or email will be discarded without response.

Notifications and Queries

Please allow up to three months for a decision. Using our online submissions system, you will be able to track the status of your submission.

Publication & Compensation
Publication is online at TorchLiteraryArts.org, unless expressly stated for special publications.

Authors whose work is selected for a Friday Feature will receive a $50 (US) payment for publication.

All rights revert back to the author after publication.

Awards

All work accepted for publication will be considered for nomination for internal and external awards such as The Pushcart Prize, Best of the Net, etc.

torchliteraryarts.submittable.com/submit

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OPEN CALL: EYEBEAM CENTER FOR THE FUTURE OF JOURNALISM

Eyebeam Center

DEADLINE: Rolling

INFO: The Eyebeam Center for the Future of Journalism (ECFJ) is a grant-making program that supports artists producing innovative and revelatory journalistic work for major media outlets.     

The funds distributed to artists will assist with research, travel, and other expenses many media outlets struggle to cover, allowing stories that are often out of reach in today’s climate to be produced. And, in an effort to be responsive to an ever-fluctuating news cycle, artists will be able to apply to ECFJ for support of their work on a rolling basis. Artists with longer-term, research-intensive projects are also encouraged to apply. Grant support will range from $500 to $5,000.

All applicants must read the ECFJ Open Call page before applying: https://eyebeam.org/ecfj

Eligibility:

  • Individuals and collectives can apply. Collectives must have work samples that reflect a history of working together.

  • International applicants are welcome.

  • Applicants must have an existing commission letter from an editor.

  • Applications are accepted on a rolling basis.

  • At this stage of the program, all applications must be in English.

Criteria

ECFJ is a grant-making program that financially supports artists producing innovative journalistic work for major media outlets. Artists applying must have demonstrated track record of working with major media outlets. 

Artists creating work with a focus on the following issues are encouraged to apply: 

  • Data privacy

  • 2018/2020 elections

  • Role of technology in society

  • Political influence campaigns

  • Interrogating harmful technologies

  • Countering disinformation

  • Artificial Intelligence

Each applicant must provide: 

  • 300-word project description

  • Assignment letter from editor

  • A reference contact or letter of support

  • Two samples of past work

  • Detailed budget of expenses (travel costs, per diem and research costs are acceptable)

At this time, final pieces must be in English. 

All applications should be in alignment with Eyebeam’s core values of:  

  • Openness: All the work here is driven by an open-source ethos.

  • Invention: We build on old ideas to generate new possibilities.

  • Justice: Technology by artists is a move towards equity and democracy.

Equity and Inclusion: Eyebeam aims to create a hub for conversation and practice-sharing that is aware and responsive to systemic inequities in technology and invests in the meaningful inclusion of historically marginalized groups and voices. Eyebeam is committed to and values diversity in its organization and programs as defined by gender, race, ethnicity, disability-status, age, sexual orientation, immigrant status, and socioeconomic status. With a history rooted in innovation and collaboration Eyebeam’s programs are grounded in artist-community dialogue. Eyebeam supports the meaningful access to technology for everyone. 

https://eyebeam.submittable.com/submit/8c1eb216-e4b6-4693-af07-66c58e7053fb/eyebeam-center-for-the-future-of-journalism-application

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CALL FOR IMMIGRANT WRITERS

ẹwà

DEADLINE: Rolling

INFO: ẹwà is an independent journal that publishes original work exclusively by immigrant writers — foreign-born and first-generation — living in the United States. We are interested in poetry, fiction, memoir, personal essay, lyric, hybrid forms as well as non-academic cultural criticism.

A few things:

  • Submissions are accepted year-round, on a rolling basis.

  • We do not accept previously published material (in print or online).

  • Simultaneous submissions are accepted, but please notify us right away if your work is accepted anywhere else. 

  • We accept multiple submissions in all genres of writing. We also accept co-/multiple-authored works, but please make sure that appropriate permissions have been granted.

  • To submit, please send your work in a single document containing no more than six pages of writing to submit@ewajournal.com.

TERMS: ẹwà requests first rights, worldwide, and the right to include the work on the ẹwà website indefinitely. After publication, all rights revert to the author. Copyright always remains with the author. Should your work be republished elsewhere in the future, please credit ẹwà with its first publication. Our terms will be updated as necessary.

ewajournal.com/submissions

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CALL FOR MENTORS

Latinx in Publishing

DEADLINE: Rolling

INFO: The Latinx in Publishing Writers Mentorship Program is a volunteer-based initiative that offers the opportunity for unpublished and/or unagented writers who identify as Latinx (mentees) to strengthen their craft, gain first-hand industry knowledge, and expand their professional connections through work with experienced published authors (mentors).

QUALIFICATIONS TO BE A MENTOR

  • Must identify as Latinx (does not include individuals of Spanish origin)

  • Must have published at least one book prior to February 2020

  • Must be located in the U.S. during the course of the program

  • Must be available to dedicate at least one hour per month for a minimum of ten months

ABOUT THE WRITING MENTORSHIP PROGRAM

  • The next cycle of the program runs from February 2022 through October 2022.

  • Applications for 2022 mentees will open in September, 2021. Applications for mentors are open on a rolling basis.

  • Mentees must complete a sign-up survey and submit 5-10 pages of sample writing.

  • Mentors must complete a sign-up survey and review mentor guidelines.

  • We match individuals based on category and time- commitment preferences. The sign-up survey will help us make the best matches between mentor and mentee.

    • Please be aware that not everyone who applies will be matched.

  • Participants will be notified of their mentor-mentee match and provided with contact information by January 2022.

  • Mentors and mentees will connect for one hour per month over a minimum of ten months.

  • The program will close in October 2022, but if the mentor and mentee would like to continue their mentor relationship, it is entirely at their discretion.

  • Please be aware that the Latinx in Publishing Writers Mentorship Program is a volunteer-based initiative. Latinx in Publishing will not be held responsible for mediating any relations between mentors and mentees once the program ends.

https://latinxinpublishing.com/mentorship

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CALL FOR SUBMISSIONS

Unmute Magazine

DEADLINE: Rolling

INFO: Unmute Magazine, is a digital mag that aims to lift the voices of BIPOC creatives who’ve been historically marginalized.

They are accepting the following submissions (must be arts-related):

  • Album/EP or concert review (600-800 words).

  • A review of your own music or art including a discussion of the inspiration behind it (600-800 words).

  • Art-related how-to article (600-800 words).

  • Interviews (an introductory paragraph and five written questions).

  • Reflections / Essays (up to 1,500 words).

  • Song or poem including a discussion of the inspiration behind it (may submit up to four for review).

  • Photograph(s), illustrations, art (JPEG or PNG format).

  • Have your own idea? Please pitch it to us!

Please submit the following with your piece:

  • A third-person bio of up to 100 words.

  • (Optional) Photo as JPEG or PNG format for your bio.

  • (Optional) Up to 3 links to social media (i.e. Spotify, Soundcloud, website, Instagram, etc).

Submission Rules:

  • Written works and bio must be submitted in Word or Pages format

  • By submitting you agree to be considered for publication in Unmute Magazine.

  • Work must be original.

  • Unmute Magazine retains standard first publication rights for submissions. All rights immediately revert to the creator upon publication.

  • It may take several weeks for a response, but your submission will be read. If accepted, you will be notified.

  • By submitting to Unmute Magazine, you agree to be added to our mailing list. You can unsubscribe at any time.

  • Please email your submission to Submissions (at) unmutemagazine (dot) com

https://unmutemagazine.com/submissions/

FICTION / NONFICTION — FEBRUARY 2022

Annual Writers’ Retreat

Roots. Wounds. Words.

DEADLINE: February 6, 2022

APPLICATION FEE: $25

INFO: The Roots. Wounds. Words. Annual Writers’ Retreat for Storytellers of Color is a sacred space wherein BIPOC stories are celebrated, and BIPOC storytellers immersed in liberation. At the Writers’ Retreat, Storytellers receive literary arts instruction offered by award-winning BIPOC writers in the fields of nonfiction, fiction, poetry, and speculative fiction.

In summer 2022, Roots. Wounds. Words. Fellows will journey to a sacred space where they will workshop their literary art, perform their work, participate in BIPOC-centered healing and liberation modalities, as well as receive literary arts pedagogy from renowned BIPOC storytellers.

To attend this offering, submit an application through our online system. Prior writing experience is insignificant. Whether you’ve attended a writing workshop before or not holds no weight. All applicants are judged on the merits of their full application, which includes an artistic statement, bio and writing sample.

The Roots. Wounds. Words. Writers’ Retreat is for Us.

Each year, the Writers’ Retreat changes locations to ensure that BIPOC storytellers around the country have an opportunity to benefit from its offerings. No matter the region, the Writers’ Retreat is always held in an atmosphere replete with nature and restorative quiet.

Our annual Retreat provides BIPOC storytellers with a transformative opportunity to push your pen, strengthen your craft, access literary art professionals, rest and restore, and build the tribe you need to support your writing goals.

FACULTY:

  • Deesha Philyaw, Fiction Faculty

  • Prisca Dorcas Mojica Rodríguez, Nonfiction Faculty

  • Xan Phillips, Poetry Faculty

  • Nisi Shawl, Speculative Fiction Faculty

RETREAT DATES:

June 12 - June 18, 2022

RETREAT LOCATION:

Metro Philadelphia, PA region or virtually, depending on COVID-19 trends and protocol.

ELIGIBILITY:

  • The Retreat is open to storytellers of color.

  • Storytellers of all levels are welcome to apply.

  • Storytellers must be at least 21 years old.

  • Storytellers currently enrolled in graduate or undergraduate programs are welcome to apply.

APPLICATION PROCESS:

Applicants are required to select a category into which your submission fits. The categories are:

(1) Fiction

(2) Nonfiction

(3) Poetry

(4) Speculative Fiction

Your writing sample must match the category you apply for. For example, if you are applying for the fiction workshop, you must submit a fiction writing sample. You are allowed only one submission per category. You may apply to more than one category. However, each submission is separate. You must complete separate applications and pay the submission fee for each category you submit to. 

MANUSCRIPT WORK SAMPLE:

We require a standard format for all fiction, nonfiction, and speculative fiction submissions. The format is:

  • The manuscript may not exceed 10 pages.

  • 1-inch page margins.

  • Double spaced.

  • Text must be in a 12-point serif font (preferably Times New Roman).

  • Electronic file names must consist of the writer’s last name followed by the manuscript title. For example, Smith__A Day in the Park. Poets and those with a longer manuscript title can simply use something like Smith__manuscript for RootsWoundsWords

  • The manuscript must be submitted as a Word document or PDF

  • The applicant’s name and page number must appear on each sheet of the manuscript; for example, Smith, p.1

  • If you are submitting prose, you must include a brief note regarding whether the piece stands on its own as a short story or essay, or is an excerpt from a longer project.

  • Manuscripts excerpted from a longer project should include a one-page synopsis of the larger project placed at the back of the work sample (the synopsis can be single-spaced and does not count toward the 10-page limit).

We require a standard format for all poetry submissions. The format is:

  • The manuscript may not exceed 10 pages.

  • May include one or more poems as long as the total number of pages is within the 10-page limit.

  • Electronic file names must consist of the writer’s last name followed by the manuscript title. For example, Smith__A Day in the Park. Poets and those with a longer manuscript title can simply use something like Smith__manuscript for RootsWoundsWords

  • The manuscript must be submitted as a Word document or PDF

  • The applicant’s name and page number must appear on each sheet of the manuscript; for example, Smith, p.1

BRIEF BIO: Each applicant must submit a bio of no more than 250 words.

ARTIST STATEMENT: Each applicant must submit a statement describing their literary art and how it pushes liberation for BIPOC forward. Resources: How to Write a Poetry Cover Letter from The Watering Hole, “Ready, Set, Residency” by Brevity Nonfiction Blog, and Artist Statement Guidelines by Getting Your Sh*t Together Ink.

WHY RWW: Each applicant must describe what they intend to gain from and contribute while at the Writers’ Retreat.

ACCEPTANCES: RWW will work with our Faculty to notify all accepted Storytellers of their acceptance to the Writers’ Retreat by March 7, 2022.

TUITION:

  • If the Writers’ Retreat is in-person, as we expect it will be, tuition will be $1875.00.

  • If the Writers' Retreat is virtual, due to COVID-19 trends and protocol, tuition will be $875.

  • Payment plans as well as limited partial and full scholarships will be available.

DEPOSIT:

  • If the Retreat is In-Person, a $500 deposit will be due no later than March 25, 2022.

  • If the Retreat is Virtual, a $300 deposit will be due no later than March 25, 2022.

  • Receipt of deposit confirms your attendance.

rootswoundswords.org/about

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2022 Writer to Agent

Association of Writers & Writing Programs

DEADLINE: February 7, 2022 at 11:59pm EST

REGISTRATION FEES:

  • In-Person Member Rate: $195 - $435

  • Virtual-Only Member Rate: $100 - $150

  • In-Person Non-Member Rate: $295 - $540

  • Virtual-Only Non-Member Rate: $175 - $215

INFO: AWP is pleased to offer registered conference attendees the opportunity to apply to meet with literary agents at the #AWP22 Conference & Bookfair. All registered attendees, including both in-person and virtual-only attendees, are welcome to submit to Writer to Agent. These agents are seeking new clients to represent in fiction and nonfiction. 

Literary agents from Aevitas Creative ManagementAyesha Pande LiteraryFolio Literary ManagementSerendipity Literary Agency, and Trellis Literary Managementwill read and review applications on a rolling basis to find prospective clients to meet with at the conference. If the literary agency is interested in the author’s work, they will contact the applicant directly to schedule a day and time to meet during #AWP22.

HOW TO SUBMIT:

  • Only registered attendees of the #AWP22 Conference & Bookfair are eligible.

  • Submit a query letter along with the first five pages of a novel, essay collection, narrative nonfiction book manuscript, or short story collection as one document via the Writer to Agent link in AWP’s Submittable account. The Writer to Agent page is hidden and can only be accessed through this webpage for registered attendees.

  • The five-page submission should be double-spaced in Times New Roman, 12-point font, and the document should be saved according to your type of project and your name (Project_LastName_FirstName); for example, “Novel_Proulx_Annie” or “Essays_Didion_Joan.”

  • Query letters are comprised of a description of the book and the author’s bio. If you have questions about writing and submitting a query letter, review the Writer to Agent Web Series episode for instructions and tips.

  • Indicate in the query letter if the submission has been published in a magazine or journal.

  • Agents from each of the five participating agencies will read the query letters and submissions. You may address your query letter to “agent.”

  • Submissions in poetry are not eligible.

  • Submissions are limited to one per conference attendee. If you are working on multiple projects, you can only pitch one but may very briefly mention other projects towards the end of your query letter: i.e., “I am also working on a young adult novel.” Multiple submissions will be removed from consideration.

awpwriter.org/awp_conference/writertoagent_overview

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24PearlStreet Winter Writing Workshops

Fine Arts Work Center in Provincetown

DEADLINE: February 7, 2022

INFO: 24PearlStreet (in Provincetown, MA) has allocated 5 scholarships, worth $600 each for Asian-American writers to attend any Winter session workshop starting after February 14th.

Interested, qualifying writers may submit one application which includes a paragraph—in the text of the email—detailing interest in a particular workshop; as well as 3-5 pages of sample work in the genre of the workshop.

Subject line of emailed applications: Winter Scholarship

Send applications and questions tojjean@fawc.org

fawc.org/scholarships/

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MACDOWELL FELLOWSHIP

MacDowell

DEADLINE: February 10, 2022 at 11:59pm EST*

PROCESSING FEE: $30

INFO: MacDowell is a fellowship and residency program for writers, visual artists, composers, filmmakers, playwrights, interdisciplinary artists, and architects. About 300 artists are awarded Fellowships each year and the sole criterion for acceptance is artistic excellence.

There are no residency fees. Need-based travel grants and stipends are available to open the residency experience to the broadest possible community of artists. Artists with professional standing in their fields, as well as emerging artists, are eligible to apply.

MacDowell encourages artists from all backgrounds and all countries in the following disciplines: architecture, film/video arts, interdisciplinary arts, literature, music composition, theatre, and visual arts. Any applicant whose proposed project does not fall clearly within one of these artistic disciplines should contact the admissions department for guidance. We aim to be inclusive, not exclusive in our admissions process.

*MacDowell has announced it will go from three annual application deadlines and corresponding seasons to two. That means the next application deadline will be February 10, 2022 for residencies during the period September of 2022 through February of 2023. To go along with that change, the admissions department has decided to temporarily suspend a longstanding requirement that applicants supply reference letters as part of the application process.

macdowell.org/apply/apply-for-fellowship

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The Joel Gay Creative Fellowships

Roxane Gay / Substack

DEADLINE: February 10, 2022

INFO: The following is from Roxane Gay’s The Audacity newsletter:

In partnership with Substack, I am establishing the Joel Gay Creative Fellowships to support three emerging writers over the course of the year as they develop and publish a newsletter on the Substack platform.

Fellows will receive a $25,000 stipend, paid monthly from the initial publication of their newsletter, as well as up to $15,000 in services from Substack, including editorial support, design assistance in developing a logo for your newsletter, access to Getty Images, Substack Defender, and other business support services. Fellows will contract directly with Substack for the stipend. 

Additionally, I will meet with fellows once a month over the course of the year to provide mentorship on both craft and navigating the business of writing. The fellowships are open to writers from all backgrounds but I am prioritizing writers from underrepresented communities. 

To apply, submit a brief proposal detailing the newsletter you would like to create and why as well as brief summaries (100 words or so, each) of five potential newsletter issues (essays). Please also include a prose writing sample (fiction or nonfiction). The entire application should be no more than 2,500 words. Submit your materials in a single PDF via gay.submittable.com, using the Joel Gay Creative Fellowship submission category. This fellowship is open to any writer who does not yet have a book published or under contract. There are no other requirements. 

Applications are due by midnight on February 10th, and the selected fellows will be announced by March 15th. 

These fellowships honor the memory of Joel Gay, beloved son, father, brother, and husband. He was passionate, creative, and ambitious–all qualities the selected fellows should embody.

https://bit.ly/3fQKbcl

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2022 Bechtel Prize For Innovation in Creative Writing Instruction

Teachers & Writers Collaborative

DEADLINE: February 11, 2022

INFO: T&W is now accepting submissions of essays describing a creative writing teaching experience, project or activity that demonstrates innovation in creative writing instruction.  We are looking for essays that describe a project or activity that got students excited about writing and fostered a vibrant and dynamic culture of literacy in the classroom.  We welcome essays about projects that carved a space for students to reflect on the events of the past year (eg. public health, social distancing, racial justice protests, etc.).

The experience/project/activity should be one that:

  • helped students identify as writers

  • opened new pathways to creative writing

  • engaged students in all parts of the writing process

  • promoted connections between reading and writing

  • supported the publication of student writing

The essay itself should:

  • Share actual classroom experience, including sharing how students engaged with the project (in other words, this should not be a planned project, but rather one that has already taken place).

  • Focus on the classroom experience and what makes it an innovative one.

  • Focus on teaching creative writing (eg. poetry, fiction, playwriting). Please do not send essays that have to do with teaching academic writing or teaching literature, in general.

The essay selected to receive the Bechtel Prize will be published in Teachers & Writers Magazine, and the author will receive a $1,000 award.

GENERAL SELECTION CRITERIA: Selection criteria for the Bechtel Prize include the project’s relevance and appropriateness for readers of Teachers & Writers Magazine, most of whom teach writing at the elementary, secondary, or post-secondary level. Teachers & Writers Magazine publishes work that is concise, lively, and geared to a general audience. Prospective entrants for the Bechtel Prize are encouraged to visit the magazine to become familiar with the work of Teachers & Writers, and to read past published lesson plans and articles.  The prize selection committee is made up of members of the editorial board of Teachers & Writers Magazine.

twc.org/bechtel-prize

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CALL FOR SUBMISSIONS: Issue 9 - ‘GIBBERISH’

Lucky Jefferson

DEADLINE: February 13, 2022

INFO: Did you grow up with a name others found difficult to pronounce? Speak a foreign language? Know a word or a phrase that doesn’t translate well to English?

Celebrate your culture and language! We want to hear about those “gibberish” experiences and words we’ve never seen or heard before. 

Poems, essays, flash fiction, hybrid forms, and art are all welcome. Send us anything that relates to uncommon or foreign words and languages that hold significance to you.

GUIDELINES:

  • Send no more than 3 poems in a submission. Separate poems by page break.

  • No more than 1000 words for flash fiction.     

  • Include a short and sweet cover page highlighting: your name, email address, mailing address, and bio (third-person, 50 words max).      

  • No work that has been previously published in print or online.

*If translation is necessary, please email submissions@luckyjefferson.com.

*We will not tolerate any work that promotes harmful stereotypes and perspectives including: racism, bigotry, misogyny, homophobia, transphobia, islamophobia, xenophobia, antisemitism, ableism.

luckyjefferson.submittable.com/submit

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LITERATURE GRANT

Café Royal Cultural Foundation

DEADLINE: February 14, 2022 at 9:00am EST

INFO: Café Royal Cultural Foundation NYC will award a publishing grant to authors of fiction / creative non-fiction, poetry and playwriting. 

GRANT: Up to $10,000.00  

ELIGIBILITY: Authors in fiction / creative non-fiction, poetry and playwriting. The applicant must be the originator of the written material.

Grants awarded in this category may fund costs associated with continuing the composition of work submitted. Such as:

  • Course Reduction (if you're a Teacher/Professor)

  • Salary Replacement

  • Living Expenses

  • Research Expenses

Writers applying must be a current resident of New York City and have lived there for a minimum of one year prior to applying.

Please make sure to submit your application with ample time before the start date of your project. 

Applicants can only apply with the same project twice.

REVIEW PROCEDURES: Funding decisions will be made by the Café Royal Cultural Foundation Selection and Executive Committees. The following criteria will be applied in evaluating grant proposals:

  • Creativity, originality, ideas and concepts, writing style

  • Importance of the Project/Cultural Relevance

  • Promise of future achievements in writing

APPLICATION REQUIREMENTS: 

  • Up to and no more than a 15 page PDF of the work, for the Café Royal Cultural Foundation executive committee to download and read.

  • A letter of intent from the publisher with a date of planned publication, if no publisher is assigned, Café Royal Cultural Foundation may work with writer to help find a publisher.

  • A short description of the project.

  • A short author biography of the person(s) involved.

  • List of costs that the grant money be used for - must not exceed the amount of $10,000.00

caferoyalculturalfoundation.org/literature-page

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CALL FOR SUBMISSIONS

Black Frieghter Press

DEADLINE: February 15, 2022

INFO: Black Freighter Press is seeking submissions for When We Exhale, an anthology uplifting cultural memory and healing tools from Black women. We envision a society where Black women can exhale. Centering our breath work as sacred, we hope to build a legacy of awareness and expression.

We are interested in Poems, Essays, Fiction, Meditations, Recipes, and Short stories.

When We Exhale is seeking submissions from Women of the African Diaspora, healers, storytellers, educators, and activists.

instagram.com/p/CX2NHfylMQW/

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2022 J. Michael Samuel Prize

Lambda Literary

DEADLINE: February 15, 2022

INFO: The J. Michael Samuel Prize honors emerging LGBTQ writers over the age of 50. To be eligible, the winner of the prize must be unpublished and meet our minimum age requirement. The award includes a cash prize of $5,000.

ELIGIBILITY:

In order to be considered for the award, the applicant must:

  • be 50 years of age or older as of January 1st of the award year;

  • be unpublished and have no books under contract or forthcoming from a publisher (up to one (1) self-published title is permitted). Writers with bylines for short stories, poetry, and essays are still eligible.;

  • be of demonstrated ability and show promise for continued growth; and

  • show meaningful engagement with LGBTQ literary communities.

lambdaliteraryawards.submittable.com/submit/212919/2022-j-michael-samuel-prize

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Publishing Fellowship Program

Latinx in Publishing

DEADLINE: February 15, 2022

INFO: The Latinx in Publishing Inc. (LxP) Publishing Fellowship Program will allow aspiring Latinx publishing mentees (living in the U.S. or Puerto Rico) to remotely shadow the process of a publishing professional. LxP will facilitate the mentee selection process, provide networking opportunities for the selected mentee with their network of members including publishing professionals, agents, editors, and writers, as well as conduct regular check-ins with an LxP program officer. The 2022 Publishing Fellowship will be in editorial.

THE 2022 EDITORIAL FELLOW: Supported by Macmillan, an aspiring Latinx editor (living in the U.S. or Puerto Rico) will have the opportunity to remotely shadow the editorial process of an editor or senior editor, from acquisition to publication for 10-month period. LxP will facilitate the mentee selection process, provide networking opportunities for the selected mentee with their network of members including agents, editors, and writers. Mentee and mentor will meet (virtually) at minimum once a month and there will be regular check-ins with an LxP program officer.

MENTEE STIPEND Mentee will receive a stipend of $2,500. 

TERM: 10 months (Starting June 2022). The program is now accepting applications from January 31, 2022 until February 15, 2022.

ELIGIBILITY REQUIREMENTS: The Publishing Fellow must be Latinx, at least 18 years old, and reside in the United States (including Puerto Rico), though they are not required to be citizens or “legal” residents. Latinx in Publishing defines “Latinx” as persons originating from, descendant from, or citizens of Argentina, Belize, Bolivia, Brazil, Chile, Colombia, Costa Rica, Cuba, the Dominican Republic, Ecuador, El Salvador, Guadeloupe, Guatemala, Guyana, Haiti, Honduras, Martinique, Mexico, Nicaragua, Panama, Paraguay, Peru, Puerto Rico, Saint Barthelemy, Saint Martin, Uruguay, and Venezuela.

ABOUT MACMILLAN: Macmillan Publishers is a global trade book publishing company with prominent imprints around the world. Macmillan publishes a broad range of award-winning books for children and adults in all categories and formats.

latinxinpublishing.com/publishing-fellowship

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OPEN CALL FOR ARTISTS

The Shed

DEADLINE: February 21, 2022, at 6 pm ET

ENTRY FEE: $0

INFO: Born out of The Shed’s commitment to act as a platform for NYC-based early-career artists working in a range of artistic disciplines, Open Call selects, fosters, and presents new work. The program showcases a wide, multiborough range of voices, lived experiences, and perspectives, demonstrating the multitude of ways in which artists are working today. It embraces proposals for new works in disciplines including the visual arts, theater, dance, music, performance, spoken word, literary arts, film, fashion, art and technology, social practice, and new media, as well as across multiple and new disciplines. 

For The Shed, an early-career artist is one who has not yet received major support to create new work. We define major support as a range of opportunities, from the receipt of substantial institutional funding to presenting and/or producing opportunities at large-scale cultural organizations. 

ABOUT THE APPLICATION AND SELECTION PROCESS: By decentralizing the curatorial voice within the selection process, which challenges the gatekeeping tendencies common to arts institutions, Open Call realizes The Shed’s civic mission to be truly of, by, and for New York City. As in the two previous iterations, participants for Open Call’s third edition will be selected by more than 50 independent leaders across all artistic fields, including artists, cultural programmers, curators, producers, academics, and members of The Shed’s program team. The selection will take place in summer 2022. 

The Shed will support selected projects with a commissioning fee of up to $15,000 of producing stewardship per artist or collective, paid in installments associated with specified milestones. Over the course of the Open Call program, each commission will be produced and designed in collaboration with The Shed’s artistic and production teams, who will work closely with each artist or collective throughout critical moments of the project’s development. This collaboration will include the creation of a customized plan that integrates accessibility into each piece. Additionally, in-kind presenting support managed by The Shed will go toward the implementation and installation of the work on-site, including artistic and production support outlined in detail on the application. 

The selected projects will be presented between the summers 2023 and 2024 in various spaces at The Shed, including our outdoor Plaza and one of our galleries as part of a group exhibition in 2023 and the Overlook and The Griffin Theater in 2024. All tickets to Open Call will be offered to the public for free. Along with the points of access created for each piece, these free tickets make the program accessible, welcoming, and inviting for all New Yorkers. 

Artists or collectives whose projects have been selected will be notified by August 2022 and will be publicly announced in October 2022. 

As per New York City guidelines, applicants and all associated collaborators accepted to who will be on-site at The Shed must be fully vaccinated for Covid-19.

theshed.org/program/229-open-call-2023-applications?utm_source=pocket_mylist

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Teen Summer Writing Fellowship

GrubStreet

DEADLINE: February 22, 2022 at 11:59pm

INFO: GrubStreet's Teen Summer Writing Fellowship immerses high school students (in the greater Boston area) in the writer's life of creative craft and publishing. During three weeks at GrubStreet, teens work with published authors and meet with literary agents and editors, take field trips to inspirational locales like the ICA, and more. In the spirit of writers' residencies for adults, all teens will receive a stipend for their commitment to the program and their time spent as working writers.

The Teen Summer Writing Fellowship is an intensive, three-week creative writing program for young writers. Through classes, workshops, and readings, students will generate new work, learn about the craft of writing, and gain knowledge of the writing/publishing world. In the tradition of adult writing fellowships, each student will receive a stipend of $625 upon completing the program and successfully completing its requirements. 

The YAWP Fellowship is by application only and 20 students will be chosen to participate. YAWP fellowship recipients may only attend the fellowship every other year, once as an incoming freshman/sophomore and once as an incoming junior/senior. Students learn techniques in all genres: fiction, nonfiction, poetry, and screenwriting. And no matter their favorite genre, they’re expected to try any and all writing techniques covered in the program. Students are also encouraged to fuse genres and explore sub-genres like sci-fi/fantasy, verse novels, speculative fiction/magical realism, mystery, romance, and whatever their imagination calls for. This program is rooted in artistic exploration and learning how to commit to their art no matter where life takes you.

NOTE: We are planning for this year's fellowship to be held in-person, but this is subject to change depending on CDC guidelines. The 2021 program was remote, and it was still a huge success! The information below applies to the in-person version of the program; however, if we go remote, comparable benefits will be provided before, during, and after the three-week program.

WHEN: Mondays through Fridays, July 11th - July 29th, 2022

  • If needed, transportation assistance (MBTA subway/bus pass) is also provided upon request. (Commuter rail passes are available on a case-by-case basis, depending on budgets.)

  • A live and in-person fellowship reception and showcase will be scheduled when it is safe to gather again.

WHO: All incoming 9th-12th graders in the greater Boston area with an interest in creative writing. (This means that you must be going into the 9th, 10th, 11th, or 12th grade in Fall 2022 to apply.) 

WHERE: GrubStreet Seaport location (if it is safe to gather; otherwise, it will be remote)

The program has these 3 elements:

  1. GENERATIVE: Writing from exercises in fiction, poetry, nonfiction, and screenwriting.

  2. WORKSHOPPING: Learning how a traditional workshop works, learning how to give and receive feedback.

  3. LEARNING ABOUT THE EDITING/WRITING/PUBLISHING WORLD: Learning about opportunities for writers during and outside of college, as well as the world of agents, editors, and the writing marketplace.

Still unsure if you should apply? Read about a past fellow's experiences here.

STIPENDS: In the spirit of adult writers' residencies, teen participants will be paid a $625 stipend for their three-week commitment to learning about writing. Payment of the stipend is contingent on being on time, attending all of the sessions, and meeting fellowship requirements. 

THE APPLICATION PROCESS:

Once the application period opens, each student must upload in their online application the following documents:

  • Creative Writing Sample (2-10 pages) which can include fiction, nonfiction, poetry, plays, screenplays, cross-genre or experimental work. This may include multiple pieces and/or genres (no academic essays).

  • Personal Statement (no more than 600 words) -- Answer the question:

    If you were chosen as a writing fellow, what do you think you'll gain from this experience and what do you think you can offer this writing community?

The online application will also ask for the following information:

  • Your name, contact information, and high school name.

  • Your parent/guardian name, contact information

  • A teacher/mentor name, contact information

  • Your demographic information (optional)

Please email yawp@grubstreet.org with any questions.

grubstreet.org/programs/for-teens/summer-fellowship/?utm_source=social&utm_medium=instagram

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Interdisciplinary Artist Residency Program

Peter Bullough Foundation

DEADLINE: February 22, 2022

INFO: The Peter Bullough Foundation in downtown historic Winchester, Virginia provides residencies to emerging artists and scholars, including those elevating voices and topics relevant to the LGBTQIA2S+ community. Applications are now being accepted for fall 2022 residencies to work in the private studios and enjoy the garden and former homes of Dr. Peter Bullough. The ideal applicant will be self-directed and able to work independently. Each awarded residency period is roughly four weeks and is shared with one to two other artists in residence. Artistic collaborators in groups of two to three may apply in one application. Hosting a community workshop virtually or in-person during the residency is encouraged, but not required.

Disciplines Accepted:
Architecture, literature, film/video arts, interdisciplinary arts, music, music composition, playwriting, screenwriting, poetry, scholars, theatre, and the visual arts.

Fall 2022 Residency Dates:

August 18 - September 13
September 15 - October 11
October 13 - November 8
November 10 - December 6

Selection:
Selection is a multi-step process involving the PBF staff, residency committee, residency alumni, and board. We may request an interview with you to learn more about you and your work. Selections will be announced 30-45 days after the application deadline. The PBF does not discriminate in its programs and activities on the basis of race, sex, sexual orientation, gender identity, gender expression, marital status, religion, creed, national origin, age, and/or disability.

Accommodations & Support:
The Peter Bullough Foundation is delighted to offer free accommodations for two to three artists at a time in Dr. Bullough’s former home, a renovated 1840’s house with private bedrooms and bathrooms and shared common spaces. Private studios and workspaces are located in an adjacent building that also houses the majority of the late Dr. Bullough’s book and art collections. Private gardens connect the properties and are also available as open-air workspaces.

A $550 stipend is provided to aid in covering supplies, necessities, and food for the month. 

Accessibility:
The PBF is not ADA accessible at this time. For more information on accessibility, please check out our FAQ's

Location: 
Winchester, Virginia is a quintessential American small town, with four locally-owned breweries, many small shops, 10 different historic house museums, a kids science museum, and a large regional art museum. 

Application Requirements:

  • Application Form

  • Resume, CV, or Statement of Qualifications

  • Two Personal References

  • Personal Statement and Proposal

  • Portfolio

peterbulloughfoundation.org/residency?fbclid=IwAR1MRyNsx3HGw1Vimr66ld9RkMwoyFRYvIA6qHHNlUaE8hw2rarYFoUF2wE

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GRANTS FOR ARTISTS & WRITERS WITH CHILDREN

Sustainable Arts Foundation

DEADLINE: February 25, 2022 at 5pm ET

INFO: This year, The Sustainable Arts Foundation will make awards of $5,000 each to twenty artists and writers with children. Additionally, we will name twenty finalists.

Our awards offer unrestricted cash, which recipients can use as they see fit. 

Our selection process is focused almost entirely on the strength of the submitted portfolio. 

ELIGIBILITY:

To be eligible, the applicant must have at least one child under the age of 18. Parents of older children with a disability or special needsmay also be eligible.

WHO SHOULD APPLY:

Artists and writers with at least one child under the age of 18 and a strong portfolio are welcome to apply.

We are inspired by anyone making creative work while raising a family. Given the intense demand for these awards (we typically receive 2,000-3,000 applications), and the fact that the awards are based on demonstrated excellence in your discipline, we don’t recommend that artists or writers just beginning their creative careers apply to this program. 

While we don’t require that applicants have published or exhibited their work, the rigor and critique involved in that process can certainly benefit the portfolio. Portfolios of writing or artwork created in a more personal vein for sharing with friends and family are not suitable.

We invite you to view our list of previous awardees and follow the links to their work to get a feel for their level of craft. 

RACIAL EQUITY:

As of Fall 2016, we make at least half our awards to applicants of color. You can read more about this decision on ourwebsite.

DISCIPLINES:

Writers may apply in one of the following categories:

  • Creative Nonfiction

  • Early and Middle Grade Readers

  • Fiction

  • Graphic Novel/Graphic Memoir

  • Illustrated Children's Books

  • Illustrated Children's Books (Text Only)

  • Poetry

  • Young Adult Fiction

Visual artists may apply in one of the following categories:

  • Book Arts

  • Ceramics

  • Drawing

  • Fiber Arts and Textiles

  • Illustration

  • Installation

  • Jewelry

  • Mixed Media

  • Painting

  • Photography

  • Printmaking

  • Sculpture

  • Wearable Textiles

CRITERIA:

We are looking for excellent work. The portfolio is the primary factor we consider in evaluating each application.

apply.sustainableartsfoundation.org

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The Graywolf Press Nonfiction Prize

DEADLINE: February 28, 2022

INFO: A $20,000 advance and publication by Graywolf Press will be awarded to the most promising and innovative literary nonfiction project by a writer not yet established in the genre. The winning author will also receive a $2,000 stipend intended to support the completion of their project. 

The 2022 prize will be awarded to a manuscript in progress. We request that authors send a long sample from their manuscript, as well as a description of the work, as detailed below. We expect that we will work with the winner of the prize and provide editorial guidance toward the completion of the manuscript. 

The Graywolf Press Nonfiction Prize emphasizes innovation in form and content, and we want to see projects that test the boundaries of literary nonfiction. We are less interested in straightforward memoirs, and we turn down a large number of them every year. The Graywolf editors are particularly interested in books that explore new approaches to cultural and literary criticism, as well as writing on craft. Before submitting your manuscript for the prize, please look at the books previously published as winners of the prize for examples of the type of work that we are seeking. 

The 2022 prize will be judged by the Graywolf Press editors. The editors reserve the right to invite submissions or make exceptions. Agented submissions are also welcome. Manuscripts submitted for previous years’ prizes will not be reconsidered unless resubmission has been specifically requested by the Graywolf editors.

graywolfpress.org/about-us/submissions

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2022-2023 Emerging Writer Fellowship

GrubStreet

DEADLINE: February 28, 2022

INFO: GrubStreet’s 2022-2023 Emerging Writer Fellowship application is now open. Each year, the fellowship aims to develop new, exciting voices by providing three writers tuition-free access to each of the following:

  • 4 multi-week courses

  • 4 one-day (six-hour) classes

  • 4 three-hour seminars

  • 3-day pass to the 2022 and 2023 Muse & the Marketplace conferences

  • Access to GrubStreet's Education Director and/or other program staff members for quarterly (or as-needed) office hours for personalized mentorship. (Not Required)

The fellowship year begins at the 2022 Muse & the Marketplace conference, which will take place in late April, and culminates in attendance at the 2023 Muse & the Marketplace. The fellowship specifically aims to assist writers in need of financial assistance in reaching their writing goals. We particularly encourage writers of color, ethnic minorities, those who identify as LGBTQ+, people with disabilities, and other members of communities historically underrepresented by the literary community to apply. 

https://bit.ly/3FUg2n3

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MY TIME: A Fellowship for Parent Writers

The Writers’ Colony at Dairy Hollow

DEADLINE: February 28, 2022

APPLICATION FEE: $35

INFO: The Writers’ Colony at Dairy Hollow is pleased to announce the 2022 My Time fellowship funded by the Sustainable Arts Foundation. Writers who are also parents of dependent children under the age of 18 are invited to apply. Work may be any literary genre: fiction or nonfiction, poetry or prose, script or screenplay.  The successful application will demonstrate literary merit and the likelihood of publication. Prior publication is not a requirement.

Two fellowship winners will receive a one-week residency to allow the recipient to focus completely on their work. A $400 stipend will be provided to cover childcare and/or travel costs. Each writer’s suite has a bedroom, private bathroom, separate writing space, and wireless internet. We provide uninterrupted writing time, a European-style gourmet dinner prepared five nights a week, and served in our community dining room, the camaraderie of other professional writers when you want it, and a community kitchen stocked with the basics for other meals.

The winner will be announced no later than March 21, 2022. Residencies may be completed at any time during 2022. This may be extended up to twelve months for extenuating circumstances including COVID-19 concerns.

writerscolony.org/fellowships

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David T. K. Wong Creative Writing Fellowship

University of East Anglia

DEADLINE: February 28, 2022

ADMINISTRATION FEE: £10

INFO: The David T. K. Wong Creative Writing Fellowship is a unique and generous annual award of £26,000 to enable a fiction writer who wants to write in English about East and Southeast Asia to spend a year at the University of East Anglia.

The Fellowship is named for its sponsor Mr David T.K. Wong, a retired Hong Kong businessman who has also been a teacher, journalist and senior civil servant, and is a writer of fiction. The Fellowship was launched in 1997 and the first Fellow appointed from 1st October 1998.

David T.K. Wong's first novel The Evergreen Teahouse was published in 2003, his collection of short fiction Chinese Stories in Times of Change in 2009.  His most recent novel is The Embrace of Harlots. To read excerpts from David Wong's work and for more information, please visit his website.

In light of the ongoing Covid-19 pandemic, the 2022/23 Fellowship may take place partly or entirely online instead of in-person on the UEA campus, in accordance with university and government guidelines. They will update applicants on the situation as soon as we have more information.

uea.ac.uk/about/school-of-literature-drama-and-creative-writing/creative-writing/writing-fellowship/david-tk-wong-fellowship

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Practitioner Fellows

Brown University Center for the Study of Race and Ethnicity in America

DEADLINE: February 28, 2022 by 5pm EST

INFO: CSREA invites artists, media makers, and writers external to Brown University whose work focuses on race, ethnicity, and/or indigeneity in the United States and work that connects the U.S. to related transnational contexts, to apply to be a Practitioner Fellow for the spring 2023 academic term.

This program is a virtual spring semester fellowship. The terms of the program may be subject to change. 

THE FELLOWSHIP: Fellows will have access to Brown University resources and are invited to contribute to the academic community. There will be opportunities to present work-in-progress in a campus-wide public lecture or performance. Projects should focus at least in part on issues of race, ethnicity, and/or indigeneity in the U.S. and work that connects the U.S. to related transnational contexts. Fellows are expected to cover their own expenses (including health benefits) for the duration of their appointment. 

Fellowship Details:

  • Awardees will receive a $10,000 stipend for a semester-long fellowship and have access to up to $1,500 each in research/project funds

  • Attendance at the virtual Practitioner Fellows Workshop (number of sessions to be determined) is required

  • Participation at an in-person Practitioner Fellows Capstone where participants will present their work (travel and lodging provided) is required

  • Fellows are expected to participate in social community-building activities sponsored by the Center (e.g. Wind Down Wednesdays, lectures, events, etc.)

QUALIFICATIONS:

APPLICATION PROCESS:

Applicants must complete this application form and submit all requested supplementary documents via Interfolio to be fully considered. The application will open the first week of January. Submissions via email will not be accepted. Applicants must submit the following: 

  • A cover letter discussing what the applicant hopes to achieve during the fellowship period and why being affiliated with CSREA and Brown would be especially helpful in accomplishing the goal

  • A current curriculum vitae (CV) or résumé

  • A sample of scholarly or creative work (maximum 35 pages)

  • Submission guide for non-written works:

  • Image files: embed or hyperlink to examples of your work in addition to a written component explaining the nature of the work(s) submitted, not to exceed 35 pages total

  • Audio or video files: hyperlink to or upload files using the “additional file” option, that are 8-10 minutes in duration cumulatively (either a single link/file can be up to 10 minutes long or multiple submitted links/files can be submitted, but should not exceed 10 minutes total), in addition to a written component explaining the nature of the works submitted, not to exceed 35 pages total

  • A one-page project abstract (500-800 words)

  • A more detailed project proposal (1,000-2,000 words):

  • The proposal should outline the project that the applicant will pursue during the term of the fellowship

  • Two confidential letters of recommendation endorsing the applicant and the proposed project

Applications will be reviewed by the CSREA Faculty Advisory Board (FAB). Other relevant faculty within or external to Brown may be consulted at the discretion of the FAB.

Awardees will be notified in May 2022. The first convening of the selected cohort of fellows will be in January 2023.

brown.edu/academics/race-ethnicity/programs-initiatives/csrea-fellows-program/practitioner-fellows

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CALL FOR INVITATIONS

Nomadic Press

DEADLINE: February 28, 2022

INVITATION FEE: $10

INFO: For years, we have used the “industry”-standard language—submissions. Any way you cut it, the word “submit” grates against who we are and what we stand for. It feels inauthentic to continue to use this word. We want to instead offer that this is a process of sending us an invitation—an invitation into relationship, an invitation to work together, an invitation to experience your art with you, an invitation into a space most sacred.

This year, we are accepting invitations in the following categories: chapbooks, full-length collections (poetry, fiction, non-fiction), and children's books. Please review category-specific guidelines below. 

Accepted works will be published in 2023–2024. 

Prior to sending us an invitation, please ensure that you are familiar with our organization's vision, mission, and safe space statement/process. We are more than just a publishing house. If you have not gotten a chance to read one of our books, please take a moment to do so. You can also see a list of previously published Nomadic Press authors at this link. 

GENERAL INVITATION GUIDELINES:

We love simple:  

  • attach two file versions of your work: a .pdf and a .doc(x)

  • for fiction, non-fiction, and children's books: double-space your invitations

  • 12 pt. serif font (Garamond, Times New Roman)

WORD-COUNT LIMITS:

  • Chapbook (poetry, fiction, non-fiction): maximum of 70 pages or 21,000 words (@ roughly 300 words per page)

  • Full-length (poetry, fiction, non-fiction): anything above 70 pages or 21,000 words (@ roughly 300 words per page)

  • Children's books: we are interested in BIPOC/LGBTQIA+ children's books that earnestly push boundaries and engage kids in explorations of social and environmental justice issues. No word limit. Please include sample illustrations in your invitation or pictures from illustrators you are considering. We do have illustrators that we work with and we would like to see what type of illustration aesthetic you are leaning toward.

  • Note: photographs and illustrations are welcome in place of (or in addition to) written material, though it will be our final decision as to whether or not to include them should we decide to take on the project.

HOW DO WE READ YOUR INVITATIONS?

We have a team of 3 first-round readers, all of whom are previously published Nomadic Press authors. Our readers change every year. These readers will rate each invitation and we will compile a short list of finalists, out of which final publications will be chosen by our editorial team.

As an independent, small press, we take our reading period very seriously and enlist the help of trusted, highly talented authors who understand who Nomadic Press is and what we stand for. We feel it is important to pay them for their time, which your submission fee of $10 helps to cover. We look forward to reading your work, and thank you again for your interest in our press, and our values.

nomadicpress.submittable.com/submit

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CALL FOS SUBMISSIONS: THE RUMPUS ORIGINAL FICTION

The Rumpus

DEADLINE: February 28, 2022

INFO: The Rumpus Original Fiction series runs twice monthly, and features original short fiction of a wide variety.

Please submit a short story of up to 7500 words as a Word doc or PDF, accompanied by a brief cover letter and third-person bio. If you are sending flash fiction (1000 words or less), you’re welcome to submit up to three pieces for consideration as one submission.

Please only send one submission per reading period, and if you have a submission pending, please wait to submit again until you've received our decision on the pending submission. Work must be previously unpublished; this includes personal blogs/websites and social media.

At The Rumpus, we are interested in stories that have layers, with elements of surprise and unexpected stakes and points of tension running beneath. Rumpus stories have an edge and a voice we haven't heard before. They tackle emotional depth while not being at all sentimental. We love it when a story's language, plot, and characters feel palpable and dynamic on the page, and a strong sense of place goes a long way. Show us something new, bold, brash, alive.

We encourage simultaneous submissions but request that this be noted in your cover letter. If your submission is accepted elsewhere, please withdraw it through Submittable.

therumpus.submittable.com/submit

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CALL FOR SUBMISSIONS: FICTION / NONFICTION

Anomaly

DEADLINE: March 1, 2022

ENTRY FEE: $3 (Fees will be waived for all Black and Indigenous writers to support those most targeted by state violence. Email editor [at] anomalouspress [dot] org to request a fee waiver.)

INFO: Anomaly is currently seeking fiction and nonfiction.

REQUIREMENTS:

  • Fiction: Attach one story of no more than 5000 words. Please include a short bio in the "Cover Letter" field. Translations that foreground the work of the original author are welcome in this category. For translations that foreground the creativity of the translator, please see our Translation section.

  • Nonfiction: Attach one piece of no more than 5000 words. Please include a short bio in the "Cover Letter" field. Translations that foreground the work of the original author are welcome in this category. For translations that foreground the creativity of the translator, please see our Translation section.

anmly.submittable.com/submit

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CALL FOR SHORT STORY / FLASH FICTION MANUSCRIPTS

Split Lip Press

DEADLINE: Match 1, 2022

ENTRY FEE: $15

INFO: We are currently looking for short story or flash fiction full-length manuscripts (combinations of flash and longer short stories in the manuscript are welcome as well). We won't define "full-length" but 150-250 pages tends to be the sweet spot. We're looking for manuscripts that question boundaries (physical, emotional, metaphysical, meta-emotional—you get the gist). Dazzle us with your version(s) of truth! 

To get an idea of what we love, please check out our current short story/flash fiction offerings: My Share of the Body by Devon Capizzi, 48 Blitz by Brett Biebel, This. This. This. Is. Love. Love. Love. by Jennifer Wortman, Hungry People by Tasha Coryell, Felt in the Jaw by Kristen Arnett, and The Hook and the Haymaker and I Am the Oil of the Engine of the World, both by Jared Yates Sexton. We'd love it if you'd add a copy to your submission, and we'll happily throw in free shipping as a thanks!

Historically under-represented perspectives are WELCOME and ENCOURAGED and HIGHLY SOUGHTwe want to help bring your voice to the world! 

Our press mission

We publish boundary-breaking fiction, nonfiction, and hybrid books, lifting the transition boards that prevent fluidity and smashing those we cannot pry up. We love work that questions the concept of truth, and work that reinterprets what we think we know. 

We prize experimentation (physical, emotional, metaphysical, meta-emotional); we welcome the unanswerable. We want to see the dark and the light side of the moon—or we want to see it obliterated. If your book is a wedge in a crack, Split/Lip Press is the hammer helping you split the wall apart.

All books published at Split/Lip Press have been discovered during our open reading periods—we do not solicit manuscripts and do not accept manuscripts sent outside of our reading periods. Every author has the same opportunity to join us! However, Split/Lip Press does not tolerate manuscripts celebrating racist, homophobic, or misogynistic perspectives, and will discard such manuscripts unread. We believe in breaking boundaries at Split/Lip, but we will not assist agendas of hate.

Basic formatting details

TNR 12 (or similar), double-spaced (unless you are specifically using special formattingwhich we'd love to see), and PLEASE remove your name from the manuscript and file nameour readers want to review your manuscripts without names attached. There is a box on the submission form where, if you choose, you may indicate any information about positionality which may be helpful for the readers to know.

Note that while we love and welcome work which includes copyright-free images/diagrams/etc, we may be unable to reproduce color images and they may need to appear as black-and-white images within the printed book, so please keep that in mind when submitting.

Hugs + thanks

We work closely with our authors on all elements of their book, from design to promotion. We are engaged in the literary community, and as writers ourselves, we know how important it is to have a book that you love that is supported by a press that loves you. We'd love for you to be part of the Split/Lip Press family.

We intend to reply to all submissions by May 15, 2022, so please do not query about the status of your manuscript before that date. If you haven't seen anything from us by 5/15/22, check your status in Submittable and double-check your email spam filter because Submittable's messages sometimes get stuck there—we will definitely respond! Simultaneous submissions are obviously welcome; just let us know if another publisher snags you first.

splitlippress.submittable.com/submit

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Spring 2022 Call for Submissions

A Gathering Together Literary Journal

DEADLINE: March 1, 2022

INFO: A Gathering Together is a journal that resists the easy and often unsophisticated attempt to say profound things in the moment, without deep contemplation, or in the heat of discursive battle.

We welcome submissions of previously unpublished essays, short stories, poetry, reviews, visual art, and film for our Spring 2022 issue.

We primarily select works that speak to Mekhet--the Kemetic (Ancient Egyptian) term for resonating across time and space. This term is reserved for works that simultaneously transcend and address the moment they speak from, works that will last beyond the creator's last breath and still be relevant, or works that put the writer and reader in conversation with the intellectual thought of Ancestors of all kinds.

Our writers are primarily descendants of Africa and her Diaspora. All writers whose works resonate with the human experience, and thus the Diasporic African experience, are considered. Our back issues are all available online and serve as a good model for the variety of writers and works we've featured.

Artists who want to be featured in our upcoming issues are invited to send us a letter of interest, a brief bio, and a sample portfolio. Writers who want to conduct artist interviews are welcome to send us pitches letting us know how the interview and artist would be a good fit for our journal. Features are generally published January-March or July-September.

A Gathering Together is unable to compensate writers at this time.

agatheringtogether.com/how-to-submit/

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ROLLING SUBMISSIONS

Essays on Radical Healing

That’s No Longer My Ministry

DEADLINE: Rolling

INFO: Hi! We’re journalists, editors and content creators Foram Mehta and Nadia Imafidon. And we’re teaming up to publish a first-of-its-kind anthology that aims to tell a different story about healing. As an extension to the evocative podcast series of the same name, the collection will tell the stories of marginalized folk in their own words about how they’re actively purging years of conditioning and the consequences of never being centered.

These stories acknowledge and move through trauma; they hold space for radical self-liberation and using “No.” as a complete sentence. They remind us: We don't have to hold onto the things that no longer serve us because that's no longer our ministry.

Publication Details

Accepted essays will be edited by us (Foram & Nadia) and curated together for a book that will be available for purchase as an e-book or as a paperback. Print copies of the book and one-hundred percent of proceeds from subsequent sales will be donated to Aakoma Project, an organization that aims to

Compensation

Writers whose essays are accepted for final publication will be credited with a byline in the book and a complimentary paperback copy of the completed anthology.

A note about writing for free: As writers ourselves, we know writers are highly underpaid and undervalued, but we also know the joy of contributing to a collaborative body of work for the sake of storytelling, for the sake of healing together. Everyone on this project (including us) is a non-paid contributor donating their time and work for the benefit of Aakoma Project.

We say this while also acknowledging that we live in a world that operates on money, and spending time to write for free is not a privilege afforded to everyone. That’s also why we’re asking for non-exclusive rights only to contributors’ essays (more details to be provided in the contributor’s agreement).

build the consciousness of youth of color and their

caregivers on the recognition and importance of mental health. They do this by offering free

therapy and workshops to youth and their families, helping to influence systems and services to

receive and address the needs of youth of color and their families.

Pitching Guidelines

We are seeking pitches for non-fiction first-person essays from people of color who hold identities that are marginalized. This includes but is not limited to:

  1. LGBTQIA+

  2. Immigrant/First-generation

  3. Refugee

  4. Indigenous

  5. People with disabilities

When submitting your pitch, please include a brief bio and a link to your portfolio and/or first-person writing samples. We understand that not everyone will have a portfolio, so please send us something to give us an idea of your writing style.

Your pitch should include:

  1. Working title

  2. A summary of your story. (Tell us why you’re the person who needs to tell this story.)

We aim to get back to everyone who submits a pitch, but please allow us some time to respond, as we anticipate a full inbox! We will send contributor agreements to writers whose pitches we accept. Please, do not submit fully written essays.

Submit pitches to nolongermyministry@gmail.com. Editorial Guidelines

After we accept your essay pitch, writers should use the following writing guidelines: ● First-person reflections

○ Use this creative, non-fiction writing guide for reference

  • ●  Non-fiction

  • ●  English (with creative use of language)

  • ●  8th grade reading level (When in doubt, keep it simple!)

  • ●  1,500-3,00 words recommended

  • ●  AP Style (reference guide)

    We’re interested in your story, but we acknowledge that your story will likely include other people in it. For that reason, we ask that if you’re mentioning someone by their name that you get their permission to do so or change the name.

thatsnolongermyministry.com/anthology?fbclid=IwAR24GQ_s4cHpXBc3mp3bjvbmdvLyxKwr4dCaz6lTgGd2zYV_YlH-KmZIvVM

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TORCH FRIDAY FEATURE

Torch Literary Arts

DEADLINE: Rolling

ENTRY FEE: $0

INFO: Torch Literary Arts welcomes submissions of original creative work by Black women writers. We are interested in work that challenges and disrupts preconceived notions of what contemporary writing by Black women should be. Your stories and poems are valuable and necessary. Write freely and submit what you are excited to share with the world.

Reading Period
Submissions are accepted for Friday Features only. We accept submissions on a rolling basis.

Simultaneous Submissions
Simultaneous submissions to other journals are welcome as long as they are identified as such and we are notified immediately upon acceptance elsewhere.

Manuscript Submission Guidelines
Include a one (1) page cover letter noting the title(s) of the work(s) submitted.

Upload your text submission as a Word (DOC, DOCX) or portable document format/PDF (PDF).

Typed, double-spaced (poetry may be single-spaced) pages. 

Numbered pages.

Margins should be set at no less than 1” and no greater than 1.5”.

Poetry: submit up to five (5) poems totaling no more than eight (8) pages.

Fiction, Hybrid genre: 12-point font. No more than ten (10) pages or 2500 words (whichever is achieved first). Excerpts of longer works are welcome if self-contained.

Drama/Screenwriting: submit one act or a collection of short scenes no longer than ten (10) pages. Excerpts of longer works are welcome if self-contained. Indicate if a performance video or dramatic audio reading will be available with the text submission if selected.

Restrictions
We do not reprint previously published work for TORCH Friday Features.

Submitting Online
We accept submissions via our online submission management system only. Submissions via postal mail or email will be discarded without response.

Notifications and Queries

Please allow up to three months for a decision. Using our online submissions system, you will be able to track the status of your submission.

Publication & Compensation
Publication is online at TorchLiteraryArts.org, unless expressly stated for special publications.

Authors whose work is selected for a Friday Feature will receive a $50 (US) payment for publication.

All rights revert back to the author after publication.

Awards

All work accepted for publication will be considered for nomination for internal and external awards such as The Pushcart Prize, Best of the Net, etc.

torchliteraryarts.submittable.com/submit

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OPEN CALL: EYEBEAM CENTER FOR THE FUTURE OF JOURNALISM

Eyebeam Center

DEADLINE: Rolling

INFO: The Eyebeam Center for the Future of Journalism (ECFJ) is a grant-making program that supports artists producing innovative and revelatory journalistic work for major media outlets.     

The funds distributed to artists will assist with research, travel, and other expenses many media outlets struggle to cover, allowing stories that are often out of reach in today’s climate to be produced. And, in an effort to be responsive to an ever-fluctuating news cycle, artists will be able to apply to ECFJ for support of their work on a rolling basis. Artists with longer-term, research-intensive projects are also encouraged to apply. Grant support will range from $500 to $5,000.

All applicants must read the ECFJ Open Call page before applying: https://eyebeam.org/ecfj

Eligibility:

  • Individuals and collectives can apply. Collectives must have work samples that reflect a history of working together.

  • International applicants are welcome.

  • Applicants must have an existing commission letter from an editor.

  • Applications are accepted on a rolling basis.

  • At this stage of the program, all applications must be in English.

Criteria

ECFJ is a grant-making program that financially supports artists producing innovative journalistic work for major media outlets. Artists applying must have demonstrated track record of working with major media outlets. 

Artists creating work with a focus on the following issues are encouraged to apply: 

  • Data privacy

  • 2018/2020 elections

  • Role of technology in society

  • Political influence campaigns

  • Interrogating harmful technologies

  • Countering disinformation

  • Artificial Intelligence

Each applicant must provide: 

  • 300-word project description

  • Assignment letter from editor

  • A reference contact or letter of support

  • Two samples of past work

  • Detailed budget of expenses (travel costs, per diem and research costs are acceptable)

At this time, final pieces must be in English. 

All applications should be in alignment with Eyebeam’s core values of:  

  • Openness: All the work here is driven by an open-source ethos.

  • Invention: We build on old ideas to generate new possibilities.

  • Justice: Technology by artists is a move towards equity and democracy.

Equity and Inclusion: Eyebeam aims to create a hub for conversation and practice-sharing that is aware and responsive to systemic inequities in technology and invests in the meaningful inclusion of historically marginalized groups and voices. Eyebeam is committed to and values diversity in its organization and programs as defined by gender, race, ethnicity, disability-status, age, sexual orientation, immigrant status, and socioeconomic status. With a history rooted in innovation and collaboration Eyebeam’s programs are grounded in artist-community dialogue. Eyebeam supports the meaningful access to technology for everyone. 

https://eyebeam.submittable.com/submit/8c1eb216-e4b6-4693-af07-66c58e7053fb/eyebeam-center-for-the-future-of-journalism-application

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CALL FOR IMMIGRANT WRITERS

ẹwà

DEADLINE: Rolling

INFO: ẹwà is an independent journal that publishes original work exclusively by immigrant writers — foreign-born and first-generation — living in the United States. We are interested in poetry, fiction, memoir, personal essay, lyric, hybrid forms as well as non-academic cultural criticism.

A few things:

  • Submissions are accepted year-round, on a rolling basis.

  • We do not accept previously published material (in print or online).

  • Simultaneous submissions are accepted, but please notify us right away if your work is accepted anywhere else. 

  • We accept multiple submissions in all genres of writing. We also accept co-/multiple-authored works, but please make sure that appropriate permissions have been granted.

  • To submit, please send your work in a single document containing no more than six pages of writing to submit@ewajournal.com.

TERMS: ẹwà requests first rights, worldwide, and the right to include the work on the ẹwà website indefinitely. After publication, all rights revert to the author. Copyright always remains with the author. Should your work be republished elsewhere in the future, please credit ẹwà with its first publication. Our terms will be updated as necessary.

ewajournal.com/submissions

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CALL FOR MENTORS

Latinx in Publishing

DEADLINE: Rolling

INFO: The Latinx in Publishing Writers Mentorship Program is a volunteer-based initiative that offers the opportunity for unpublished and/or unagented writers who identify as Latinx (mentees) to strengthen their craft, gain first-hand industry knowledge, and expand their professional connections through work with experienced published authors (mentors).

QUALIFICATIONS TO BE A MENTOR

  • Must identify as Latinx (does not include individuals of Spanish origin)

  • Must have published at least one book prior to February 2020

  • Must be located in the U.S. during the course of the program

  • Must be available to dedicate at least one hour per month for a minimum of ten months

ABOUT THE WRITING MENTORSHIP PROGRAM

  • The next cycle of the program runs from February 2022 through October 2022.

  • Applications for 2022 mentees will open in September, 2021. Applications for mentors are open on a rolling basis.

  • Mentees must complete a sign-up survey and submit 5-10 pages of sample writing.

  • Mentors must complete a sign-up survey and review mentor guidelines.

  • We match individuals based on category and time- commitment preferences. The sign-up survey will help us make the best matches between mentor and mentee.

    • Please be aware that not everyone who applies will be matched.

  • Participants will be notified of their mentor-mentee match and provided with contact information by January 2022.

  • Mentors and mentees will connect for one hour per month over a minimum of ten months.

  • The program will close in October 2022, but if the mentor and mentee would like to continue their mentor relationship, it is entirely at their discretion.

  • Please be aware that the Latinx in Publishing Writers Mentorship Program is a volunteer-based initiative. Latinx in Publishing will not be held responsible for mediating any relations between mentors and mentees once the program ends.

https://latinxinpublishing.com/mentorship

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CALL FOR SUBMISSIONS

Unmute Magazine

DEADLINE: Rolling

INFO: Unmute Magazine, is a digital mag that aims to lift the voices of BIPOC creatives who’ve been historically marginalized.

They are accepting the following submissions (must be arts-related):

  • Album/EP or concert review (600-800 words).

  • A review of your own music or art including a discussion of the inspiration behind it (600-800 words).

  • Art-related how-to article (600-800 words).

  • Interviews (an introductory paragraph and five written questions).

  • Reflections / Essays (up to 1,500 words).

  • Song or poem including a discussion of the inspiration behind it (may submit up to four for review).

  • Photograph(s), illustrations, art (JPEG or PNG format).

  • Have your own idea? Please pitch it to us!

Please submit the following with your piece:

  • A third-person bio of up to 100 words.

  • (Optional) Photo as JPEG or PNG format for your bio.

  • (Optional) Up to 3 links to social media (i.e. Spotify, Soundcloud, website, Instagram, etc).

Submission Rules:

  • Written works and bio must be submitted in Word or Pages format

  • By submitting you agree to be considered for publication in Unmute Magazine.

  • Work must be original.

  • Unmute Magazine retains standard first publication rights for submissions. All rights immediately revert to the creator upon publication.

  • It may take several weeks for a response, but your submission will be read. If accepted, you will be notified.

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  • Please email your submission to Submissions (at) unmutemagazine (dot) com

https://unmutemagazine.com/submissions/

FICTION / NONFICTION - MARCH 2016

THE EMERGING WRITER’S CONTEST

Ploughshares

INFO: The Emerging Writer's Contest is open to writers of fiction, nonfiction, and poetry who have yet to publish or self-publish a book.

AWARD: The winning story, essay, and poems from the 2016 contest will be published in the Winter 2016-17 issue of Ploughshares. Each writer will also receive $1,000. 

SUBMISSION FEE: $24, free for current subscribers.

DEADLINE: March 1, 2016, at noon EST.

pshares.org/submit/emerging-writers-contest/guidelines

 

MACONDO WRITERS’ WORKSHOP

INFO: Founded by Sandra Cisneros in 1995, the Macondo Writers’ Workshop focuses on bringing together a community of poets, novelists, journalists, performance artists, and creative writers of all genres whose work is socially engaged,

The Workshop will take place from July 13-17, 2016 at the Guadalupe Cultural Arts Center in San Antonio, TX. They are seeking generous and compassionate professional writers who view their work and talents as part of a larger task of community-building and non-violent social change. This year, they will hold four workshops led by Allison Hedge Coke (poetry), Alex Espinoza (fiction), Gregg Barrios (playwriting), and Joe Jimenez (multi-genre young writers’ workshop).

To be eligible, applicants must have a strong record of publications (books, chapbooks, major literary magazines) and/or public readings/performances of original work, and a history of community involvement, consciousness raising via literary work and/or activism/outreach.

DEADLINE: March 1, 2016, at midnight

guadalupeculturalarts.org/macondo-workshop/

 

TULSA ARTIST FELLOWSHIP

INFO: The Tulsa Artist Fellowship, which seeks talented and diverse voices to support Tulsa’s expanding arts scene, has expanded its program this year to include writing (creative nonfiction, fiction, graphic novel, young-adult fiction, poetry, and play/screenwriting). Fellowships are merit-based, not project grants, and include a two-year term for writers. The program will begin on January 9, 2017.

AWARD: $20,000 stipend, and in most cases, free housing and studio work space.

DEADLINE: March 4, 2016

tulsaartistfellowship.org/index.html

 

CHAMPION OF CHANGE FOR AAPI ARTS & STORYTELLING

White House Initiative on AAPIs

INFO: As a part of AAPI Heritage Month (May 2016), the White House Initiative on AAPIs is seeking nominations for Champions of Change for AAPI art and storytelling – individuals who have raised the visibility of diverse AAPI experiences and created dialogue around issues the community faces. The Champions of Change program honors individuals doing extraordinary things to empower and inspire members of their communities

Nominees may include:

  • Storytellers who have included and continue to include AAPI characters in their films, television shows, and literature to address pressing issues, including immigration, civil rights, economic opportunity, health, diversity and inclusion, and more.
  • Poets and spoken word artists who highlight AAPI experiences in their work in order to advance pressing issues, including immigration, civil rights, economic opportunity, health, diversity and inclusion, and more;

DEADLINE: March 9, 2016

1.usa.gov/1ROpsTu

 

CALL FOR SUBMISSIONS: ISSUE 07

Apogee Journal 

INFO: Apogee Journal is currently accepting fiction and creative nonfiction submissions for Issue 07. The goal of the publication is to publish exciting work that interrogates the status quo, providing a platform for unheard voices, including emerging writers of color. All work must be previously unpublished.

DEADLINE: March 15, 2016

apogeejournal.submittable.com/submit

 

VONA / VOICES SUMMER 2016

INFO: Voices of Our Nation Arts Foundation (VONA), which develops emerging writers of color through programs and workshops taught by established writers, is offering two one-week sessions (June 19-25 and June 26-July 2) at the University of Miami. In all workshops, writers exchange their works, share strategies and have discussions vital to their craft, practices and lives as writers of color. In the residencies, writers work one-on-one with a master faculty member and meet with the residency group.

FEES:

  • Regular - Weeklong workshop: $800
  • Residency: $800
  • Room and Board: $650 (includes meal card)

VONA offers financial aid in the form of tuition grants. A letter-of-need is required to be eligible.

DEADLINES:

  • March 15, 2016 – for application
  • April 22, 2016 – to confirm acceptance and pay non-refundable deposit of $100
  • May 23, 2016 – to upload manuscripts for the workshops
  • June 1, 2016 – all fees are due

voicesatvona.org/apply/

 

SAIF GHOBASH BANIPAL PRIZE FOR ARABIC LITERARY TRANSLATION

Banipal Trust for Arab Literature

INFO: The Banipal Prize is given to the translator(s) of a published translation in English of a full-length imaginative and creative Arabic work of literary merit published after, or during, the year 1967 and first published in English translation in the year prior to the award.

PRIZE: Award of £3,000

DEADLINE: March 31, 2016

banipaltrust.org.uk/prize/

 

WINTER 2016 STORY CONTEST

Narrative

INFO: Narrative’s Winter Contest is open to all fiction and nonfiction writers. They accept flash fiction, short stories, essays, memoirs, photo essays, graphic stories, all forms of literary nonfiction, and excerpts from longer works of both fiction and nonfiction. Entries must be previously unpublished, no longer than 15,000 words, and must not have been previously chosen as a winner, finalist, or honorable mention in another contest.

AWARDS: First Prize is $2,500, Second Prize is $1,000, Third Prize is $500, and ten finalists will receive $100 each. All entries will be considered for publication.

SUBMISSION FEE: $24 (includes three months of complimentary access to Narrative Backstage).

DEADLINE: March 31, 2016, at midnight PST. 

narrativemagazine.com/winter-2016-story-contest

 

IMMIGRATION WRITING FELLOW

Center for Community Change Action

INFO: The Center for Community Change Action seeks an Immigration Writing Fellow for their Latino and immigrant voter program. The ideal candidate is a first-time voter who has been personally affected by the country’s immigration policies (with either parents, siblings or other close relatives who are undocumented immigrants). Special consideration will be given to candidates based in Florida, Colorado or Nevada.

The writing fellow would be responsible for identifying potential stories and storytellers within the nation’s vast immigrant community and will conduct interviews and write first-person essays and opinion pieces or third-person reported narratives. The Fellow will also be trained as a spokesperson for the organization and is expected to appear in front of the media or before a public audience and speak about their personal experiences related to immigration.

DEADLINE: April 1, 2016

cccaction.org/immigration-writing-fellow/

 

LUCIEN STRYK ASIAN TRANSLATION PRIZE

The American Literary Translators Association 

INFO: The prize recognizes the importance of Asian translation for international literature and promotes the translation of Asian works into English. Submission will be judged on the literary significance of the translation in recreating the literary artistry of the original.

To be eligible, works must be:

  • Book-length translations into English of Asian poetry or source texts from Zen Buddhism
  • Book-length translations from Hindi, Sanskrit, Tamil, Thai, Vietnamese, Chinese, Japanese and Korean into English
  • Published in the previous year (though re-translations or first-time translations of important older works will also be considered)

DEADLINE: April 8, 2016

literarytranslators.org/awards/lucien-stryk-prize

 

CALL FOR SUBMISSIONS: IMMIGRANT WRITERS

Ninth Letter

INFO: Ninth Letter is accepting submissions of fiction, non-fiction, and poetry from immigrant writers (those who consider themselves to be 1st, 1.5, or 2nd generation immigrants in their current country of residence) for a special online edition to be published at ninthletter.com in Summer 2016. Submissions are not required to focus on the "immigrant experience" and can be on any and all topics. 

 DEADLINE: April 15, 2016

ninthletteronline.submittable.com/submit

 

2016 KIMBILIO [FICTION] SUMMER RETREAT

INFO: Kimbilio [Fiction], a community of writers and scholars committed to developing, empowering and sustaining fiction writers from the African diaspora, is currently accepting applications for their summer retreat, which will be held at SMU Campus in Taos, New Mexico from July 17-23, 2016.

FEES: Tuition is covered by Kimbilio [Fiction] and there is no application fee, however, participants are responsible for their own transportation to/from the retreat as well as a fee that partially covers the costs for room and board with the amount varying by size of the chosen accommodation. Should one get accepted, a $200 deposit is due by May 15 to secure a spot at the summer retreat. 

DEADLINE: April 15, 2016 (for applications)

kimbiliosubmissions.submittable.com/submit

 

PEN PARENTIS WRITING FELLOWSHIP FOR NEW PARENTS

INFO: Pen Parentis, a nonprofit organization that provides resources to authors who are also parents, is accepting applications for its Fellowship, which will promote the creation of new work by writers with at least one child under the age of 10. All genres and styles of fiction are welcome and novel excerpts are acceptable if they can stand alone as a story.

PRIZE: $1000, presented at the Pen Parentis Literary Salon on September 13th, 2016, in conjunction with the reading of the winning work. In addition, the Fellow will be showcased for one year on their website as the “Pen Parentis Writing Fellow” and paired with an established author.

SUBMISSION FEE: $20 (and an extra $5 fee if submitted online)

DEADLINE: April 18, 2016 

penparentis.org/fellowships/guidelines/

CALL FOR SUBMISSIONS             

BGD Press

INFO: BGD Press is looking for manuscripts by queer and/or trans writers of color that center QTPoC characters. Only polished manuscripts in the following areas will be considered:

  • YA Fiction (especially, but not limited to, YA Fantasy)
  • Speculative Fiction
  • Literary Fiction

GUIDELINES: Send a query letter along with the FIRST PAGE of your manuscript only to submissions.bgd@gmail.com

blackgirldangerous.org/submissions/#manuscripts

 

THE MARGINS

Asian American Writers Workshop

INFO: The Margins, which publishes works of short fiction by emerging and established Asian American writers, is accepting submissions for its biweekly Fiction Friday feature. Expect at least five weeks for a response.

aaww.submittable.com/submit/44798