Stone Canoe

Stone Canoe is a literary magazine published annually by The YMCA's Downtown Writers Center in Syracuse, New York ( "The DWC"). It publishes the work of writers and artists who are current or former residents of Upstate New York, which the journal's editors define as that portion of the state outside of New York City and Long Island. The magazine was established in 2007 by Robert Colley, and is currently edited by poet and DWC founder Philip Memmer. Each of the journal's major categories are edited by a panel of guest editors, which rotate annually.

Stone Canoe
Executive EditorPhil Memmer
CategoriesLiterary magazine
FrequencyAnnual
PublisherThe YMCA's Downtown Writers Center
Year founded2007
CountryUnited States
Based inSyracuse, New York
LanguageEnglish
Websitewww.syracuse.ymca.org/stone-canoe.html
ISSN1934-9963
OCLC76837112

Annual Awards

Where funding allows, Stone Canoe has a series of annual awards for the best submissions by emerging writers and artists, selected by the editors. These awards include publication and an honorarium of $500.

Reception

  • Issue 1 won a Bronze Medal at the 2007 Independent Publisher's Book (IPPY) Awards, the 2007 Certificate of Excellence for the Mid-Atlantic Region from the UCEA,[1] and a Gold Medal at the 2008 University Continuing Education Association.
  • Issue 2 won a Silver Medal at the 2008 IPPY Awards.
  • Issue 3 won a Silver Medal from UCEA.
  • Issue 4 won a Silver Medal at the 2010 IPPY Awards[2] and a Silver Medal from UCEA.
  • Issue 6 won a Gold Medal at the 2012 IPPY Awards and a Gold Medal from UCEA.
  • Issue 8 won a Silver Medal at the 2014 IPPY Awards.

Name

Stone Canoe derives its name from a traditional Native American story from Upstate New York that dates back some 2000 years. The story itself concerns the arrival of the Great Peacemaker to the region. According to Iroquois tradition, the Great Peacemaker was the founder of the Haudenosaunee, commonly called the Iroquois Confederacy. As the legend goes, the Peacemaker came to the area by crossing Lake Ontario on a white stone canoe.[3]

gollark: God chose to create humans. They had exact knowledge of what the humans would do. QED.
gollark: And the empirical things which are vaguely related go the other way.
gollark: I mean, it seems like you'd either have to make wildly insane assumptions or... somehow empirically check.
gollark: How do you even prove something like that?
gollark: I like Newcomb's paradox.

References

  1. "UCEA Fall 2007 Regional Awards". Archived from the original on 30 November 2010. Retrieved 10 March 2011.
  2. Jarvis, Eileen. "Stone Canoe journal takes silver at international IPPY Awards". syr.edu. Archived from the original on 20 July 2011.
  3. Ryan, Laura. "The Stone Canoe story". syracuse.com. Retrieved 10 March 2011.

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