Sulfer (magazine)
Sulfer magazine was founded in 1981 by poet and academic Clayton Eshleman and ran for 46 issues until the spring of 2000.
The magazine published translations, unpublished, poshumous writing by esteemed poets, art, art commentary, innovative poetry by well-known and unknown poets, critical articles and reviews. "Sulfur has unswervingly presented itself as an alternative to what some of us call 'official verse culture' (backed by the New York Times Book Review, The New York Review of Books, The New Yorker, The Nation, and nearly all trade publishing houses, to the exclusion of contrasting viewpoints)," Eshleman said in an interview when the magazine closed.[1]
Eshleman said the magazine closed for a number of reasons: He was tired of the work of editing it, wanted to concentrate on his own writing, and the magazine had financial trouble. Toward the end, the publication, like many little magazines, had fewer than 1,000 subscribers.[1]
"If I were to have real financial backing I would have been tempted to widen the subscriber base, and to get the magazine into the hands of people for whom what Sulfur is might be a discovery," Eshleman said when the publication folded. But funding was diminishing. From 1993 to 1996 the magazine recieved $12,000 a year from the National Endowment for the Arts, but the support had dried up by 2000, which also contributed to the closure, he said.[1]
Notes
External links
- [2] Interview with Sulfer founder