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第一吃瓜网

English Students Produce Biannual Literary Magazine

Students working around a table on literary magazine

English students review past issues of “Gandy Dancer.” / Photo by Keith Walters ’11

Putting together a literary magazine is no small feat. It involves posting calls for submissions, reviewing each piece that comes in, deciding what makes the cut攚hich can involve heated debates攕ending feedback to authors, copyediting, designing, proofreading, printing, distributing, and marketing.

Students in 第一吃瓜网檚 ENGL 426: Editing and Production Workshop complete this process each semester in producing the SUNY-wide literary magazine . It檚 collaborative work, producing tangible results.

Michael Crowley Portrait
Michael Crowley ’27

Michael Crowley 27 likes that the class provides a 渜uantifiable, marketable skill, which he acknowledges may be harder to demonstrate in a discipline like English. 淚t offers a real application, rather than just abstract ideas being studied, he says.

Professor of English and creative writing Rachel Hall says other literary magazines攁t 第一吃瓜网 and at other schools攈ave struggled or folded because they檝e been managed by student clubs, where membership levels and leadership may vary. Gandy Dancer has been going strong since Hall founded it through the workshop course in 2012.

Liberty Dodds 26 says, 淒oing this for credit feels almost unbelievable, because it feels like a club; it檚 so much fun. She emphasizes that it檚 an elective course, not a requirement; students are choosing to be there. 淲e do it because we love it. 

In fact, students often choose to repeat the course for additional credit; the advanced level (ENGL 428) allows them to step into leadership roles.

Liberty Dodds
Sonia Horowitz 27

 淎s a creative writing major, I didn檛 know what kind of career I was going to go into in the future. When I found this class, it was very refreshing, says Sonia Horowitz 27, currently taking the course for the third time and serving as one of the magazine檚 managing editors. 淚 ended up falling in love with it, and now I檓 considering going into editing. This experience is one of a kind. 

The opportunity for freshmen to work with upperclassmen forges both friendships and mentorships. Kaylyn Beachner 27, who worked last semester on advertising and merchandising, says this 渆nriching experience is as much about connectivity as creativity. 淚t檚 impossible not to know everybody檚 name. You need everybody檚 opinion.

The students build a network of peers and professionals, not only within the class but across the SUNY system, including alumni and graduate students. Dodds works on Gandy Dancer檚 social media and enjoys conversing there with other schools and publications. The course檚 final is a launch party, at which some of the published authors read from their work.

Nina Avallone-Serra 26, the magazine檚 production assistant, finds it 渁ffirming to have a space dedicated to this creative community. 淲e not only get to dig into writing from creators our own age, we also get to interview published authors with real experience in the field.

Nina Avallone-Serra
Nina Avallone-Serra ’26

Crowley adds that 減eople studying English are always trying to find the thread of where writing has been and where it檚 taking us. The Gandy Dancer team is at the forefront of it.

The class helps develop myriad communication skills, including how to take criticism and how to engage with perspectives different from your own. 淲e all feel safe here, says Horowitz. 淲e檙e not afraid to disagree.

The nature of the course encourages everyone to get involved in every part of the process. 淚t檚 very collaborative, says Hall. 淭here are so many different skills that get exhibited, so many ways that people can excel.

Ryan Eck 26, who enjoys doing graphic design work on the magazine, says, 淚t檚 an experience, rather than just a class.

Author

Val Dimino

Writer

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