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LITERARY MAGAZINES
Since 1844, over twenty literary magazines have provided
a medium for UNC students to showcase their writing talents. Perhaps
because their content is less controversial, these publications typically
last longer than those focused on humor or politics. New magazines
in this genre such as Sauti Mpya and Shakespeare’s
Sister reflect the continuing need for creative outlets for an
increasingly diverse student population.
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The Carolina Quarterly, Fall 1948
Founded in 1948, The Carolina Quarterly succeeded The
Carolina Magazine. Although this magazine still takes submissions
from students and faculty, its focus has changed to include the work
of writers and poets from North Carolina and beyond. Some of the notable
authors who have published work in Carolina Quarterly include
Raymond Carver, Allen Ginsberg, Ha Jin, and Joyce Carol Oates. The
Carolina Quarterly is still edited by UNC students.
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Cellar Door
Many students attend UNC with career goals of becoming writers or
artists. Since 1974, Cellar Door has offered undergraduates
opportunities to publish their poetry, prose, photographs, and illustrations.
Each year the magazine awards the Jesse Rehder Prize for outstanding
poetry and prose. The prize is a memorial to Rehder, who served
for nearly two decades in UNC’s English department “as
a one-woman” program in creative writing.
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The Carolina Magazine
The first periodical produced by UNC students is The University
Magazine, first published in 1844. This monthly magazine focused
on literature; however, it did include a “Personal Department,”
or society page with news and gossip about UNC students and town
residents. Due to the lack of subscribers and the high cost of production,
the Magazine was published sporadically until taken over
by the Dialectic and Philanthropic Societies from 1852 to 1923.
In 1921 it became The Carolina Magazine. Though it changed
a great deal in the 104 years of its existence, including changing
titles seven times, the magazine always contained articles and essays
on history, art, and education, as well as original stories and
poems by Carolina students and faculty. Contributors were not always
UNC students; historian Kemp Battle wrote an article on UNC janitor
Wilson Caldwell for the March 1895 issue, and Governor Zebulon B. Vance
offered a biography for the May 1878 issue entitled “The Life
and Character of Hon. David L. Swain.” Well-known literary
figures who attended UNC and whose early work was published in The
Carolina Magazine include Thomas Wolfe, Paul Green, Walker Percy,
and Shelby Foote.
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The Range Finder, December
1917
The members of English 21 published two volumes of The Range Finder,
one in December 1917 and another in May 1918. Publications such as
these demonstrate the UNC student’s concern with life beyond
the campus and with national and world events—in this case World
War I. According to the first issue of this literary magazine, The
Range Finder’s purpose was “to supply an appetizing
and attractive presentation of the affairs of the world—seen
through the eyes of the college man.”
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Sauti Mpya
Sauti Mpya [pronounced Sa Oo Tee Um Pee Ya] is the literary
magazine of the Sonja Haynes Stone Black Cultural Center and was the
first African-American literary journal to be published at UNC.
The premier issue in 1992 states that the magazine endeavors to
provide a forum for African-American creative expression and provide
“a peephole into the African-American experience from a twenty-first
century perspective.” Sauti Mpya publishes articles,
stories, poetry, and art submitted by UNC faculty and students, students
from other universities, and people from the surrounding community.
The title comes from the Swahili for “new voice.”
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Shakespeare’s Sister, Fall 1999
Shakespeare’s Sister was founded in 1998 for the
purpose of inspiring and supporting women writers on campus. This
bi-annual magazine publishes poems, stories, and photographs. The
title comes from Virginia Woolf’s A Room of One’s Own.
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