AIAW Opportunities

AIAW members Tala Khanmalek and Parissa Ebrahimzadeh
Tacheen is a magazine with curated content sourced from Iranians living outside of Iran - including 1st, 1.5, and 2nd generation immigrants, students abroad, living anywhere, and immersed in any discipline or craft. The first issue is still in its neonatal stages and we welcome your submissions.
Submissions can span any art form suitable for print, as well as poetry and prose, editorials and articles. Vol. 1, issue 1 is scheduled for release in July 2011. Needless to say, you'll get your very own copy and accompanying original art print placed lovingly on your doorstep.
Tacheen welcomes any and all questions and comments. Check us out on Facebook or...
Email Tacheen
Jadaliyya Ezine is launching an expanded Reviews section. We want this to be a place for commentary, debates, and exchanges on books, films, videos, art, theater, music, new media, conferences, protests, and events. Keep watching www.jadaliyya.com for updates in the weeks ahead. Please send reviews, queries, proposals, and suggestions to the Reviews Editor at reviews@jadaliyya.com
As part of this expansion, we're looking for submissions for the Reviews section:
Book reviews, including reviews of scholarly works, books aimed at mainstream audiences, novels, plays, poetry, reports from NGOs and human rights organizations, and special issues of journals and magazines; we are particularly interested in reviews of work published in languages other than English.
Film and video reviews, especially reviews of recently released films and videos, but also reviews of unjustly neglected films and videos and reassessments of classic works.
Reviews of theater works and performance pieces.
Reviews of art exhibits and installations, especially ongoing shows.
Music reviews, including reviews of recordings and performances.
Reviews and reports on conferences, panels, protests/demonstrations, and events of interest.
Reviews of websites, blogs, ezines, and other new media publications and resources.
We are also seeking submissions for several new Reviews series:
Reviews and Responses: dialogues between reviewers and authors — if you have recently published a book and would be interested in taking part in an e-roundtable with a reviewer, we would like to hear from you.
Reassessments: fresh takes on classic and canonical works — send us your suggestions.
Must-Reads: what are the five must-read books for readers seeking to understand Libya under Qaddafi, or the effects of neo-liberalism in the Middle East, or the nakba, or the history of the Muslim Brotherhood, or French influence in Tunisia, or the politics of oil (you get the idea) — send us your choices
Influences: reflections on works that have had a formative influence on you — we are particularly interested in reflections from artists, creative writers, film and video makers, musicians, and performers.
We want reviews that are lively and engaging; please avoid jargon, as Jadaliyya is read by a wide and diverse audience. Polemical pieces are very welcome. Reviews should ideally be 1,000-2,000 words. We love to receive reviews that incorporate links, imagery, and video clips.
Website: www.jadaliyya.com
Email Reviews Editor
Write to Change the World
Simmons College, 300 The Fenway, Boston
The op-ed pages and commentary forums of top media outlets―whether print, online, or broadcast―are followed by diplomats, businesspeople, scholars, and those in the highest levels of government. They feed all other media and drive thought leadership in America. They can sway public opinion and change the world. And they are open to those without publishing experience.
This seminar by the legendary OpEd Project will push you to think more carefully and more expansively about your knowledge, your ideas, and the causes you care about, and write about them to make a difference. We will explore the source of credibility and how to establish it; the patterns and elements of a powerful argument; the difference between being "right" and being effective; how to preach beyond the choir, how to think bigger about what you know, and how to make a bigger impact on the world.
This highly-interactive seminar is about much more than writing op-eds―it's about thought leadership in concrete terms. It is about empowering you to find your voice and make a difference, and it is about the collective impact we can all make by doing so. Hosted by our friends at the Simmons Institute for Leadership and Change. Click here to register, and here for scholarship info.
Hosted by our friends at the
Simmons Institute for Leadership and Change
When: Saturday, Feb 12
Time: 10 am to 5 pm (two short breaks and one longer lunch break)
Registration: www.theopedproject.org
Scholarships: www.theopedproject.org
Disability in America: Voices of a New Generation
Deadline: January 15, 2011
Ari Ne'eman and Stacey Milbern, Co-Editors
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This year, the disability community is celebrating the 20th anniversary
of the passage of the Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA), civil
rights law that protects the rights of disabled people.
Growing up in a post-ADA America has meant that many of us have had
access to more opportunities than previous generations. We know if we
had been born in 1967 instead of 1987 our lives would look completely
different. We know the history of our people is tainted by eugenics,
ableism, lack of access and the sting of low expectations. We recognize
the work that has been done by disability movements over the last
century to make the current lives we live possible. We are proud to be
members of this vibrant, breathing, community.
Although the struggle continues, we recognize that the realities of
disabled people look vastly different in many ways. With this in mind,
we are requesting proposals for chapters in a book-length anthology to
document this legacy and record the stories of disabled young people
talking about what it is to grow up with a disability in this day and age.
Part One of our anthology will attempt to explore how a new generation
experiences these age old challenges, affording a chance to assess how
far we have really come. Part Two of our anthology asks disabled young
people to identify what our struggle looks like now.
We're seeking a diversity of perspectives and topics. A few questions we
pose as food for thought:
- What does it look like to navigate the medical system?
- What is it like trying to find and keep a job as a young person with a
disability today?
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How are mental health challenges and psychiatric impairments approached
by family members?
- Do students still have to choose between support and inclusion?
- What is the impact of pity and charity?
- How do we survive the traumas we experience by people who say they are
helping us, whether this is in schools, in doctor's offices, our places
of worship, or within our support systems?
- How do people with less visible disabilities choose whether or not to
disclose?
- How has the nature of "passing" changed or not changed?
- How do we fight eugenics, with its many faces?
- How do we work with personal assistant services and our support systems?
- How is disability portrayed differently in American society?
- How are media, and pop culture representations of disability viewed by
the new generation of young people with disabilities?
- What do our relationships and sex lives look like?
- How do we find community?
We are seeking creative non-fiction essays from young people with
disabilities ages 13-30 (some flexibility will be available for
compelling submissions from individuals slightly outside our preferred
age range). People with all types of disabilities are welcome to submit.
Speaking from personal experience is strongly encouraged. The intent of
this project is to use personal voices to capture the experience of the
new generation of young people with disabilities.
Submissions should range from 2,000 to 5,000 words. Please include your
address, phone number, e-mail address and a short bio on the manuscript.
Proposals are due via e-mail to: voicesoftheadageneration@gmail.com by January 15, 2011 but we encourage and will consider for approval early
submissions.
Please e-mail co-editors Stacey Milbern and Ari Ne'eman at voicesoftheadageneration@gmail.com with questions.
Washington Square Review is seeking poetry, fiction, and nonfiction by exiled writers for publication in their Spring Issue - March 1
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The Washington Square Review is the literary journal of the MFA program at New York University. Washington Square have an ongoing goal of seeking out international writing and presenting it in translation. This Spring they will produce a themed issue called Borderlands, focused on the writing of exiled writers. They seek poetry, fiction, and nonfiction contributions.
They also seek artists in exile who are interested in collaborating in a related event in New York City this Spring, which will include readings from the issue as well as other performances.
Submissions or inquiries: anissa.bazari@gmail.com or washingtonsquare.international@gmail.com
Submissions must be previously unpublished
Deadline: Submissions must be in by March 1, 2010.
More information: www.washingtonsquarereview.com
Opportunity for Creative Prose Writers
Editions Bibliotekos, Inc. plans to publish contemporary, creative prose works in collection format. We are looking for work that addresses themes such as Medical Humanities, Immigration, 9/11-2011, War and Peace, Adoption, Nature’s World, Faith and Doubt.
Full CALL and guidelines: ebibliotekos
Periodic Updates: HERE
General Editor: Gregory F. Tague, Ph.D.
Email: EBibliotekos@gmail.com
Attention Fiction Writers!
Tehran Bureau is a new online magazine that aims to be 'The New Yorker' for the Iran audience. There will be an arts section, music as well as fiction. Tehran Bureau will be featured in the June issue of Harvard's Nieman Reports. So this would be a great time to feature our writers.
Send submissions and queries to: kelly.niknejad@gmail.com
Check out this press release from Columbia University School of Journalism
Canteen's Inaugural Fiction and Poetry Contests.
Judged by award-winning novelist Porochista Khakpour.
Deadline: May 31, 2009
Prizes:
Call for submissions - Iranian Diaspora Film Series
Deadline: January 31st, 2009
The Iranian Diaspora Film Series offers an opportunity for people of Iranian descent to share their worldviews and perspective on both their place of origin and place of residence.
Screenwriters, directors and producers of Iranian descent are invited to submit films of any genre and length to be considered for this curated screening series. Films will be screened at a venue (will be confirmed shortly) in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania (USA).
The deadline: January 31st, 2009 for the first screening series in early March 2009.
Please note that there is no submission fee.
For more information, and to submit your film please go to: www.irandiasporafilm.com
Jan 17 2009 Invitation to read - Novel Reading in DC
The International Society for Iranian Studies (ISIS) is sponsoring a novel-reading session on January 17, 2009, at Georgetown University in Washington D.C.
The theme of the reading is "The Iranian revolution through the eyes of the novel."
Writers who have published a novel set during that time are encouraged to participate and read from their novel for 15 minutes followed by Q & A.
The only criteria for participation is having written a novel that either takes place during the Islamic revolution of 1979, or somehow deals with its issues, aftermath, etc. ISIS has held four such programs in the past, which were well attended.
There is no assistance with lodging and travel expenses, but it will be a good opportunity to meet fans and sell books.
If interested, send an email to info@ibexpub.com
www.massudalemi.com
Creative Nonfiction Submissions Invited
Ozone Park, the new journal put out by the new MFA program at Queens College, is looking for creative nonfiction submissions for the debut Nov. issue.
The editor is Deonne and her email is Deonne@deonnekahler.com




