Alcheringa (magazine) explained

Alcheringa (the aboriginal word for Dreamtime) was a magazine of ethnopoetics published between 1970 and 1980.[1] It was edited by Dennis Tedlock and by Jerome Rothenberg (until 1976), proponents of the ethnopoetics movement.[2] The magazine was published by Boston University.[3]

In Alcheringa, poetry of various indigenous tribes was published and translated in English, but it also published American poets like Anne Waldman, Gary Snyder, Armand Schwerner, Robert Kelly, George Quasha, Jerome Rothenberg himself, or David Antin. Ron Silliman published an early anthology of Language poetry.[4]

Goals

The first issue of Alcheringa mentions the following goals:

Notes and References

  1. No. 1, fall 1970 – No. 5, Spring/Summer 1975 (New York); New Series, Vol. 1, Nos. 1/2, 1977 to Vol. 3.1/2, 1977 and Vol. 4. 1./2, 1980 (Boston University, Boston).
  2. Rothenberg. Jerome . Tedlock. Dennis. 1970. Alcheringa (selections): Ethnopoetics. Alcheringa. 1 . 1 . 2 .
  3. News: Alcheringa Archive: A Journal of Ethnopoetics, 1970-1980. 27 February 2016. Jacket.
  4. Ron Silliman: The Dwelling Place: 9 Poets. In: alcheringa. ethnopoetics, new series vol. 1, no. 2, 1975, p. 104-120.