Tapestry of Bronze Fall 2009 Contest
Thanks to FM contributer Stephen Mead for sharing this:
The Tapestry of Bronze is sponsoring a series of poetry contests to celebrate Greek and Roman mythology and the Olympian gods. The subject of the fourth contest is Demeter (also known as Ceres), the Goddess of the Harvest.
All poems remain the property of the authors. However, Tapestry of Bronze reserves the right to post winning poems and those receiving Honorable Mention on the Tapestry of Bronze Web site. Furthermore, interest has been expressed in setting the poems to music.
E-mail your poem (no more than 30 lines) to tapestryofbronze (at) yahoo (dot) com.
Please, NO ATTACHMENTS! Paste the poem into the e-mail instead. Don’t get fancy with formatting—pretty pictures and peculiar fonts are distracting and may irritate the judges. Please limit creativity to the poem.
Make sure your poem is about Demeter/Ceres. They received a surprising number of irrelevant poems during the last contest. These are guaranteed to irritate the judges and are all discarded.
Please also include your real name and your alias if you have one. Make sure they can respond to your e-mail. If you are entering the contest for those under 18, please include your birthdate; otherwise, simply indicate that you’re an adult.
No entry fee. Entries will be evaluated by the owners of the Tapestry of Bronze and additional experts at their discretion. It costs nothing to submit a poem to the contest, but each contestant may enter only once, so take time to make your poem your best.
The first prize winner in each age group (’Under 18′ and ‘18 and Over’) will receive $50. Honorable Mentions may be awarded as well, but without cash prizes. If no poem is of sufficient quality, no prizes will be awarded.
tapestryofbronze.com/OdeForm.html. Deadline: November 30, 2009.
Call for mythology submissions from Negations
Negations
An Interdisciplinary Journal of Social Thought
Expanding the Realm of Discourse
Negations explores the nature of civilization and society including the ethical theory that underpins
civilization. The journal is indebted to the writings of thinkers including Herbert Marcuse and Albert
Schweitzer. Their seminal ideas inspire our vision of a conversation that expands the realm of social
discourse. Negations publishes diverse interdisciplinary social criticism to awakens readers to the
irrational character of the established rationality.
Special Call for Works on Mythology
Throughout history, Mythology has been central to civilization and society. It has defined (and been
used to define) individuals, groups, societies and countries and it has been used to motivate people to
acts of great good and justified acts of great evil. While common usage restricts the term Mythology
to something almost synonymous with fairy tales, the Editors of Negations understand that the term
has much more depth and breadth and in its many incarnations continues to be a central actor in the
realm of Social Discourse.
During the 1960’s, it was famously proclaimed that both History and God were dead, Mythology
was publicly irrelevant and pragmatic rational materialism became the order of the day. Beginning in
the 1970’s, that thinking collapsed. While it is arguable that Mythology was ever dead (any more than
History or God), beginning in the 1970’s, much of what has happened in the public realm can not be
adequately explored without the recourse to different types and uses of Mythology.
Our website includes a more general lists of suggested topics. Some possible topics in regards to
Mythology include:
- The implications of “clashes of civilization” and the use of mythology to create national identity and concomitant propaganda
- The appropriation and construction of Mythology to shape discourse
- The use of Mythology in transformative political campaigns (and responses to that use)
- Possible uses of Mythology to expand the realm of discourse
- Analysis of thinkers with respect to the use of the Mythology in the context of civilization and social discourse
- Explorations of Mythology within the evolution of and revolution in communications technologies, particularly the growing range of new media (e.g. blogs, YouTube, Twitter)
- The use of Mythology vis-a-vis potentially catastrophic change (e.g. climate change, economic collapse, geopolitical revolution)
- The reshapping of Mythology in response to the changing range of what is acceptable in social discourse
Submissions
Negations accepts submissions of critical analysis, poetry, essays and other appropriate formats via
our website (www.negationsjournal.org). We welcome you to our conversation and look forward to
reading your work.
Critical thought strives to define the irrational character of the established rationality….and to
define the tendencies which cause this rationality to generate its own transformation.
— Herbert Marcuse, One-Dimensional Man