search | poetry and science

 


NY Metropolitan Museum of Art - photo by M Underwood

 

 

zine scenes

Tracks ambitious projects in hypertext. For example, see "The Writerly Web" exhibition.

Science fiction should come to terms with legitimate issues.  Does it? The fantasy element contaminates much of the writing in SF with an entertaining but counter-veridical bent. The site is thorough and reflects a diverse and engaging editorial appetite.

the cortland review

An e-zine struggling against its mainstream literary roots. Innovations like streaming audio content but the scrub-everything-start-over notion of issue format and unimaginative use of hyperlinks. Typical of the editors' Old Humanities bent: Chantelle Bentley's  Listening for the Whispers Above the Screams:
The necessity of poetry in the age of technology
Not only does this admittedly modest essay fail to convince anyone of poetry's relevance, never mind necessity, but it seems written in a world so separate from technology that it adds evidence to the counterfactual.

No science, but likeable layout.

reactor

Visuals do appeal. The poetry is reportedly hidden, perhaps nonexistent. Nice Shockware.

 

nebula
netzine of the arts & sciences 

See "Story Wrought From Cave-Wall Shadows" by Jason Broadwater. Edited with care & relevance by Ken Stange.

 

the transcendental friend

No science focus, but well edited.

Still pondering this one.

poetry superhighway

Believe for a few seconds that it's mainstream.

larry jaffe

Traditional themes, but multimedia, too. 

scenes listed
arts wire

 literaryleaps 
encyclopedia of books, magazines, ezines

DMOZ ezine directories

 

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