'the b -side The Michigan Daily I michigandaily.com Thursday, March 10, 2011 The University's five literary magazines compare their inner workings in a roundtable discussion. By Andrew Lapin // Daily Arts Writer eall get the urge, at least occasionally - the desire to write or draw something unusual, out of the ordinary. To create a work of something that, if you were to show it to a group of your peers, at least one person would be kind enough to dub "art." And when we get the urge, there is a means through which we can share that work with the world - several means, in fact, in the form of the many literary magazines on campus today. Six student editors gathered in the newsroom of The Michigan Daily in the middle of a Tuesday to talk about their magazines and the role they play in fostering creative expression, even in a world where anyone can use blogs or WordPress to self-publish their writing. Fortnight co-editors and LSA seniors David Kinzer and Sarah Doukakos, sat on one side of the table, along with two representatives from Xylem Literary Magazine: the copy chair, Dena Cohen, an LSA senior, and assistant submis- sions manager Cecilia Jaquith, an LSA sophomore. Opposite them were LSA senior Jackie Cohen, editor in chief of the RC Review, and LSA and Engineer- ing senior Powell Perng, editor in chief of the upstart publication Blueprint. With the exception of Xylem and Fortnight, which are run by the same organization, most of these editors were discovering each other's publications for the first time. If you wanted to share your story, poem or artwork with your peers in the University this year, your piece - a piece that you had to work up the nerve to pluck from the cozy insularity of your own mind to subjectto the critical eyes of strangers - probably had to go through someone sitting around this table. "I think it's a pretty incredible feat to have students putting together a maga- zine," Jaquith said. "It's a great feeling to pick up a book and see your name in there," Dena Cohen added. And somewhere in that mysterious gap between your submission e-mail and the day the publications go to print, whether or not you will experience that feelingis decided. SO MANYMAGAZINES When gathered into the same room, each of the editors was surprised at just how many other literary magazines were functioning on campus. Even the University's world- renowned medical school is home to its own printed creativity outlet - a publi- cation named The Hippo, which accepts submissions both medically and non- medically themed from its campus com- munity. Second-year Medical School students Priya Rajdev and Owen Albin, co-editors in chief of The Hippo, who were unable to participate in the roundtable conver- sation but said in an interview that they see value in providing such an outlet to some of the hard- est-working students on campus. "We think The Hippo brings a therapeutic outlet to people who want to exercise their artistic impulses," Rajdev and Albin wrote in an e-mail. "If anything, The Hippo brings a small amount of intellectual balance to the medical school. For some people, it allows an oppor- tunity to explore their interest in medicine in a very dif- ferent way, and for others, it allows the opportunity to spend time doing something completely different (from medicine)." Those ideas of therapy and balance were equally ver- balized by the editors around the table, who see their pub- lications as gateways for students to immerse themselves in the world of literary creativity. "I think that our literary magazine is really just pro- moting people to get involved in literary arts," Dena Cohen said. This involvement comes through events like readings, workshops and, in the case of the RC Review, a rummage sale that made $500 for the magazine its first year. Most of the workshops are intended to help interested weekend essentials Mar. 10 to 13 ON STAGE Michigan's winter land- scape serves as back- drop for the Ann Arbor Symphony Orchestra's Russian Romance concert this Saturday. Maestro Arie Lipsky will lead three pillars of the Russian reper- toire: the overture to Glinka's fairytale opera "Ruslan and Ludmilla," Rachmaninov's sump- tuous Piano Concerto No. 3, and Prokofiev's Soviet-era Symphony No. 5. Tickets from $10. V CONCERT Life moving a little too slow post-spring break? Luckily, the chance to speed it up is rolling into town tonight. Finger-picking, rollicking blues group Rev. Peyton's Big Damn Band is bringing their rootsy blues to the Blind Pig. The Indiana three-piece band cre- ates its unique sound with only a guitar, a washboard and drums. Doors open at nine, and tickets start at $8. students prep pieces for possible publication in a maga- zine, though things don't always pan out this way, much to the chagrin of the editors. "The last workshop we had, there was one person who was working on a really fantastic poem," Kinzer recalled. "And we told her to submit it, and she never did, and my ,---It's a great feeling to pick up a book and see your name in there. -LSA senior Dena Cohen heart is still a little bit broken." With the abundance of campus magazines, there's cer- tainly no shortage of outlets for student creativity. And more seem to be cropping up all the time. For instance, this is the inaugural year for Blueprint, which is set to publish its first issue at the end of the month. As an Engineering student, Perng took notice of the many creative writing contests that were offered to engineers and wanted to establish ar annual outlet for such works. It was also, he said, partially to buck the com- mon misconception of the engineering community as a noncreative environment. "I don't think that many people think that engineers are actually interested in literary arts," he said. "It'd be useful for the rest of the community to see the kind of cre- ativity, when it comes to literary arts, that Engineering students share." When Perng saw how other established programs like ArtsEngine and the IDEA Institute were already bring- ing together different North Campus denizens through a focus on the creative arts, he decided to expand Blue- print's scope to include the other three colleges on North Campus: Architecture, Art & Design and Music, Theatre & Dance. Jackie Cohen, too, has been able to defy stereotypes while overseeing the RC Review. See LIT MAGS, Page 4B FILM The Coen Brothers' accomplishments in film have earned them four Oscars each, and even more nominations for recent movies like last year's "True Grit." But to many, their sem- inal achievement is still "The Big Lebowski," the 1998 cult classic about futility, mistaken iden- tity and nihilism. It's screening at the State Theater at midnight on Friday and Saturday. Tickets $6. White Russians are extra. AT THE MIC If you're sick of trudg- ing into the Ugli and bumping into a poorly constructed wall every time you sit down to study, tonight you won't dine in Hell. That's because Cafe Shapiro, a night filled with poetry and short story readings, is coming to the lobby tonight at 7 p.m. Cof- fee, tea and other treats will be served alongside your evening of literary magic. PHOTOS BY SALAM RIDA DESIGN BY HELEN LIEBLICH & SALAM RIDA