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AWAKENINGS: Bridging the Cultural Divide Set to Publish September 11th

phati’tude Literary Magazine, is pleased to announce its fall issue, AWAKENINGS: BRIDGING THE CULTURAL DIVIDE Remembering September 11th. The deadline is August 12, 2011 and the publication date will be September 11, 2011.

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phati’tude Announces Summer Interns

Summer’s here and we’re excited to welcome our first “official” batch of phati’tude interns who will be working with us to help bring us up to speed. This talented and enthusiastic group were selected from a pool of 36 applicants who come to us from colleges and universities from coast to coast.

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Gabrielle David Announces New Associate Editor

Gabrielle David is pleased to announce that Jennifer-Crystal Johnson has joined phati’tude Literary Magazine’s editorial team as associate editor.

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Push on to bring nation’s first museum for writers to Chicago

Retired engineer attempting to bring together coalition of supporters, raise millions of dollars for project SANDRA M. JONES || CHICAGO TRIBUNE || JULY 2011 Malcolm O’Hagan, an Irish engineer with a love for great literature, is bringing his dream to Chicago. The retired businessman is undertaking an ambitious plan to open the first national museum [...]

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Future of the book, literature

Director of the University of Iowa Press and a City of Literature delegate Jim McCoy attends the Second UNESCO World Forum on Culture and Cultural Industries, and reports on the trip, sharing ideas and thoughts on book publishing.

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My ‘Reprehensible’ Take on Teen Literature

Writer Meghan Cox Gurdon comments on Young Adult Lit, “Contemporary fiction for teens is rife with explicit abuse, violence and depravity,” gets her in trouble with librarians and other book-industry folk.

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iPad apps take old literature to new levels

What do you know? iPad apps for T.S. Eliot’s famous poem “The Waste Land” and another for Jack Kerouac’s “On the Road.” What’s next?

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A critic and a writer as well

When I was in my early 20s and taking a few grad courses in American literature, the literary critic who affected me most deeply was Alfred Kazin. . . . He was America’s best reader of American literature in this century.”

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