场景疯狂帽子出版社:马克-文森兹访谈录

IF 0.1 4区 文学 0 LITERATURE
{"title":"场景疯狂帽子出版社:马克-文森兹访谈录","authors":"","doi":"10.1353/abr.2024.a929682","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"<span><span>In lieu of</span> an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:</span>\n<p> <ul> <li><!-- html_title --> Scenes<span>MadHat Press: An Interview with Marc Vincenz</span> <!-- /html_title --></li> </ul> <h2>Could you briefly describe your press's history?</h2> <p>The late Carol Novack and I conceived MadHat Press in 2010 as a print offshoot of the online journal <em>Mad Hatters' Review</em> (which had been going for nearly eight years prior). The first title we signed was by the poet, novelist, and anthropologist Hugh Fox, a few months before his passing. Unfortunately, neither Hugh nor Carol ever got to see any MadHat books in print. In a bizarre and tragic turn of events, Carol also died suddenly shortly after Christmas in Hendersonville, North Carolina. In the beginning, we were unsure whether we could continue.</p> <p>Some months later, the shock wave subsided. At the time I was living in Iceland, and it seemed a daunting task to work from the other side of the Atlantic with our authors and our press based in the US. As it turned out, working virtually, with fellow editors across the globe, Iceland proved to be an ideal starting point: it slipped right into the time zone between Europe and the US, but more importantly, those sprawling lunar landscapes gave us a non-gravitational view on literature, an alien eye. Without that wavering somewhere on the unknown horizon, I doubt MadHat Press would have come into being.</p> <p>Hugh's poetry collection, <em>Primate Fox</em>, and the two chapbooks from MadHat's first and only chapbook competition (selected by the ever-effervescent C. A. Conrad) were released in early 2012. Since then, Mad-Hat Press has published over 150 titles, the latest of which are Wang Ping's <em>The River Within</em>; Maxine Chernoff's selected poems, <em>Light and Clay</em>; and Peter Johnson's collected prose poems, <em>While the Untertaker Sleeps</em>.</p> <h2>How would you characterize the work you publish?</h2> <p>Carol's personal vision was wild, whacky, experimental, eclectic, and collaborative. We have done our best to continue her tradition, publishing work that stretches imaginative and structural boundaries. Although we <strong>[End Page 154]</strong> began predominantly as a poetry press, we have since expanded into fiction, and, more recently, criticism. Generally speaking, we lean toward passionate, lyrical, and explosive work, well crafted and somewhat cerebral. We lean toward the experimental: linguistically, sonically, imagistically; narratives that are not necessary linear; literary work that stands the test of time.</p> <h2>Who is your audience, and in what ways are you trying to reach them?</h2> <p>Any reader who craves fresh, original literary works.</p> <p>Insofar as getting the word out is concerned, we participate in AWP, the New Orleans Poetry Festival, the Brooklyn Book Fair, and other regional conferences and exhibitions every year, hold readings and book events as often as we can—something is going on virtually every month. We try to develop close relationships with independent bookstores, and we work very hard to get our authors' books noticed across the web and also in more high-profile review venues like <em>American Book Review</em>.</p> <p>We spread the word through social networking, and many of our authors are very active in promoting themselves—which, of course, for a small press, is essential; nothing new here. Once again, it's a long and slow haul, but I do believe the effect is cumulative both for the author and for the press.</p> <h2>What is your role in the publishing scene?</h2> <p>Well, as you know, there are a whole slew of small presses out there publishing three to five titles a year. Some fizzle out in just a few years. Publishing, particularly small-press publishing, is extremely hard work and requires Olympic endurance, bulldog tenacity, and elephantine persistence—even more so when your focus is on groundbreaking works of art, often with limited commercial appeal. You need to be extremely flexible and creative to reach an audience, and all that takes time—years and years, in fact. I can't claim that we have even scratched the surface. As publishers go, we are very young.</p> <p>There are many reputable and well-intended small-press publishers out there; however, most of them can take on only a very limited number of titles per year; furthermore, more of the larger publishing houses are shedding their more challenging literary titles. 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The first title we signed was by the poet, novelist, and anthropologist Hugh Fox, a few months before his passing. Unfortunately, neither Hugh nor Carol ever got to see any MadHat books in print. In a bizarre and tragic turn of events, Carol also died suddenly shortly after Christmas in Hendersonville, North Carolina. In the beginning, we were unsure whether we could continue.</p> <p>Some months later, the shock wave subsided. At the time I was living in Iceland, and it seemed a daunting task to work from the other side of the Atlantic with our authors and our press based in the US. As it turned out, working virtually, with fellow editors across the globe, Iceland proved to be an ideal starting point: it slipped right into the time zone between Europe and the US, but more importantly, those sprawling lunar landscapes gave us a non-gravitational view on literature, an alien eye. Without that wavering somewhere on the unknown horizon, I doubt MadHat Press would have come into being.</p> <p>Hugh's poetry collection, <em>Primate Fox</em>, and the two chapbooks from MadHat's first and only chapbook competition (selected by the ever-effervescent C. A. Conrad) were released in early 2012. Since then, Mad-Hat Press has published over 150 titles, the latest of which are Wang Ping's <em>The River Within</em>; Maxine Chernoff's selected poems, <em>Light and Clay</em>; and Peter Johnson's collected prose poems, <em>While the Untertaker Sleeps</em>.</p> <h2>How would you characterize the work you publish?</h2> <p>Carol's personal vision was wild, whacky, experimental, eclectic, and collaborative. We have done our best to continue her tradition, publishing work that stretches imaginative and structural boundaries. Although we <strong>[End Page 154]</strong> began predominantly as a poetry press, we have since expanded into fiction, and, more recently, criticism. Generally speaking, we lean toward passionate, lyrical, and explosive work, well crafted and somewhat cerebral. We lean toward the experimental: linguistically, sonically, imagistically; narratives that are not necessary linear; literary work that stands the test of time.</p> <h2>Who is your audience, and in what ways are you trying to reach them?</h2> <p>Any reader who craves fresh, original literary works.</p> <p>Insofar as getting the word out is concerned, we participate in AWP, the New Orleans Poetry Festival, the Brooklyn Book Fair, and other regional conferences and exhibitions every year, hold readings and book events as often as we can—something is going on virtually every month. We try to develop close relationships with independent bookstores, and we work very hard to get our authors' books noticed across the web and also in more high-profile review venues like <em>American Book Review</em>.</p> <p>We spread the word through social networking, and many of our authors are very active in promoting themselves—which, of course, for a small press, is essential; nothing new here. Once again, it's a long and slow haul, but I do believe the effect is cumulative both for the author and for the press.</p> <h2>What is your role in the publishing scene?</h2> <p>Well, as you know, there are a whole slew of small presses out there publishing three to five titles a year. Some fizzle out in just a few years. Publishing, particularly small-press publishing, is extremely hard work and requires Olympic endurance, bulldog tenacity, and elephantine persistence—even more so when your focus is on groundbreaking works of art, often with limited commercial appeal. 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引用次数: 0

摘要

以下是内容的简要摘录,以代替摘要: ScenesMadHat Press:与马克-文森兹的访谈 您能简要介绍一下贵出版社的历史吗?已故的卡罗尔-诺瓦克(Carol Novack)和我于 2010 年创建了 MadHat Press,作为《疯帽子评论》(Mad Hatters' Review)在线期刊(此前已出版近 8 年)的印刷分支。我们签署的第一本书是诗人、小说家和人类学家休-福克斯(Hugh Fox)在去世前几个月写的。不幸的是,休和卡罗尔都没能看到《疯帽子》的任何书籍付梓。在一个离奇而悲惨的转折中,卡罗尔也于圣诞节后不久在北卡罗来纳州亨德森维尔突然去世。一开始,我们不确定是否还能继续下去。几个月后,冲击波平息了。当时我住在冰岛,要在大西洋的另一端与我们的作者和设在美国的出版社一起工作,这似乎是一项艰巨的任务。结果证明,与全球各地的编辑们一起开展虚拟工作,冰岛是一个理想的起点:它正好处于欧洲和美国之间的时区,更重要的是,那些广袤的月球地貌给了我们一种非轨道的文学视角,一种异域的眼光。如果没有那在未知地平线上徘徊的某处,我怀疑 MadHat 出版社是否会成立。2012 年初,休的诗集《灵长类狐狸》和 MadHat 首届也是唯一一届小册子大赛的两本小册子(由永远热情洋溢的 C. A. Conrad 挑选)发行。从那时起,疯帽子出版社已经出版了150多部作品,其中最新的有王平的《内心之河》、玛克辛-切尔诺夫的诗选《光与泥土》和彼得-约翰逊的散文诗集《当无名者沉睡时》。您如何评价您出版的作品?卡罗尔的个人理念是狂野、古怪、实验、折衷和合作。我们尽最大努力继承她的传统,出版那些在想象力和结构上都有所突破的作品。虽然我们 [第 154 页完] 一开始主要是一家诗歌出版社,但后来也扩展到小说领域,最近又扩展到评论领域。一般来说,我们倾向于充满激情、抒情和爆发力的作品,精雕细琢,并具有一定的思想性。我们倾向于实验性:语言上、声音上、想象力上;不一定是线性的叙述;经得起时间考验的文学作品。你们的读者是谁,你们想通过什么方式接触他们?任何渴望新鲜、原创文学作品的读者。在宣传方面,我们每年都会参加 AWP、新奥尔良诗歌节、布鲁克林书展以及其他地区性会议和展览,并尽可能经常地举办朗读会和读书活动--几乎每个月都有活动。我们努力与独立书店建立密切的关系,我们也非常努力地让作者的书在网络上以及《美国书评》等更高知名度的评论刊物上受到关注。我们通过社交网络传播信息,我们的许多作者也非常积极地宣传自己--当然,这对一家小型出版社来说是必不可少的;这并不是什么新鲜事。再说一遍,这是一个漫长而缓慢的过程,但我相信对作者和出版社来说,效果都是可以累积的。您在出版界扮演什么角色?你也知道,现在有很多小型出版社每年出版三到五本作品。有些在短短几年内就销声匿迹了。出版,尤其是小型出版社的出版,是一项极其艰苦的工作,需要奥林匹克般的耐力、斗牛犬般的韧劲和大象般的毅力--如果你的重点是突破性的艺术作品,通常商业吸引力有限,那就更是如此了。你需要极高的灵活性和创造力来吸引观众,而所有这一切都需要时间,事实上是年复一年的时间。我不能说我们已经触及了表面。作为出版商,我们还很年轻。现在有许多声誉良好、用心良苦的小型出版社,但它们中的大多数每年只能出版数量非常有限的作品;此外,越来越多的大型出版社正在放弃更具挑战性的文学作品。在过去的几年里,有几家小型出版...
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Scenes: MadHat Press: An Interview with Marc Vincenz
In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:

  • ScenesMadHat Press: An Interview with Marc Vincenz

Could you briefly describe your press's history?

The late Carol Novack and I conceived MadHat Press in 2010 as a print offshoot of the online journal Mad Hatters' Review (which had been going for nearly eight years prior). The first title we signed was by the poet, novelist, and anthropologist Hugh Fox, a few months before his passing. Unfortunately, neither Hugh nor Carol ever got to see any MadHat books in print. In a bizarre and tragic turn of events, Carol also died suddenly shortly after Christmas in Hendersonville, North Carolina. In the beginning, we were unsure whether we could continue.

Some months later, the shock wave subsided. At the time I was living in Iceland, and it seemed a daunting task to work from the other side of the Atlantic with our authors and our press based in the US. As it turned out, working virtually, with fellow editors across the globe, Iceland proved to be an ideal starting point: it slipped right into the time zone between Europe and the US, but more importantly, those sprawling lunar landscapes gave us a non-gravitational view on literature, an alien eye. Without that wavering somewhere on the unknown horizon, I doubt MadHat Press would have come into being.

Hugh's poetry collection, Primate Fox, and the two chapbooks from MadHat's first and only chapbook competition (selected by the ever-effervescent C. A. Conrad) were released in early 2012. Since then, Mad-Hat Press has published over 150 titles, the latest of which are Wang Ping's The River Within; Maxine Chernoff's selected poems, Light and Clay; and Peter Johnson's collected prose poems, While the Untertaker Sleeps.

How would you characterize the work you publish?

Carol's personal vision was wild, whacky, experimental, eclectic, and collaborative. We have done our best to continue her tradition, publishing work that stretches imaginative and structural boundaries. Although we [End Page 154] began predominantly as a poetry press, we have since expanded into fiction, and, more recently, criticism. Generally speaking, we lean toward passionate, lyrical, and explosive work, well crafted and somewhat cerebral. We lean toward the experimental: linguistically, sonically, imagistically; narratives that are not necessary linear; literary work that stands the test of time.

Who is your audience, and in what ways are you trying to reach them?

Any reader who craves fresh, original literary works.

Insofar as getting the word out is concerned, we participate in AWP, the New Orleans Poetry Festival, the Brooklyn Book Fair, and other regional conferences and exhibitions every year, hold readings and book events as often as we can—something is going on virtually every month. We try to develop close relationships with independent bookstores, and we work very hard to get our authors' books noticed across the web and also in more high-profile review venues like American Book Review.

We spread the word through social networking, and many of our authors are very active in promoting themselves—which, of course, for a small press, is essential; nothing new here. Once again, it's a long and slow haul, but I do believe the effect is cumulative both for the author and for the press.

What is your role in the publishing scene?

Well, as you know, there are a whole slew of small presses out there publishing three to five titles a year. Some fizzle out in just a few years. Publishing, particularly small-press publishing, is extremely hard work and requires Olympic endurance, bulldog tenacity, and elephantine persistence—even more so when your focus is on groundbreaking works of art, often with limited commercial appeal. You need to be extremely flexible and creative to reach an audience, and all that takes time—years and years, in fact. I can't claim that we have even scratched the surface. As publishers go, we are very young.

There are many reputable and well-intended small-press publishers out there; however, most of them can take on only a very limited number of titles per year; furthermore, more of the larger publishing houses are shedding their more challenging literary titles. In the last few years, several...

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AMERICAN BOOK REVIEW LITERATURE-
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