Chelsea (magazine)

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Chelsea  
Discipline Literary magazine
Language English
Publication details
Publisher Chelsea Associates (United States)
Publication history 1958-2007
Frequency Biannual
Indexing
ISSN 0009-2185
Links

Chelsea was a small American, twice-a-year literary magazine based in New York City. The influential journal, edited for many years by Sonia Raiziss, published poetry, prose, book reviews and translations with an emphasis on translations, art, and cross-cultural exchange.

History

In 1958, The magazine was co-founded by Ursule Molinaro, Venable Herndon, George Economou, Robert Kelly & Joan Kelly.[1][2][3] Later, Sonia Raiziss was an editor. It published poems and prose by Denise Levertov,[4] Umberto Eco, Raymond Carver, and Grace Paley. Writers such as W. S. Merwin, Sylvia Plath, A. R. Ammons and Paul Auster were published in the magazine when they were still emerging. the first short story by Kenzaburo Oe, who was awarded the 1994 Nobel Prize for Literature. Two entire issues (1976 and 2000) were devoted to the work of Laura (Riding) Jackson.

The journal has published both new and emerging writers, some of whom have received awards or had their work in the magazine subsequently published in the Pushcart Prize, The Best American Poetry series, the O. Henry Awards and others.

Chelsea was published twice a year, in June and December, by Chelsea Associates, Inc., a non-profit corporation.

Chelsea ceased publication in 2007.[5]

The Chelsea awards for poetry and short fiction

The magazine gives out The Chelsea Award for Poetry and the Chelsea Award for Short Fiction.

Poetry winners

Short fiction winners

Masthead

References

  1. Bruce Benderson (22-MAR-02). "Ursule Molinaro". The Review of Contemporary Fiction. 
  2. http://www.chelseamag.org/about/history.asp
  3. Daniel Kane (2003). All Poets Welcome. University of California Press. p. 90–91. ISBN 978-0-520-23385-0. 
  4. Albert Gelpi, Robert J. Bertholf (2006). Robert Duncan and Denise Levertov: the poetry of politics, the politics of poetry. Stanford University Press. p. 99–100. ISBN 978-0-8047-5131-5. 
  5. Chelsea Editions

External links

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