Unless otherwise stated, authors retain copyrights over all work appearing in this publication. Individual articles, poems, and stories may be duplicated in accordance with the fair use provision of U.S. copyright law. Entire issues of Gruene Street may be electronically distributed in their original form for non-commercial use only.
Gruene Street is published quarterly. Fiction, poetry, essays, and reviews are accepted year-round. Address all correspondence to "Editors" at aff@tenet.edu
POETRY: Submit up to five poems, preferably under 100 lines
each. Gruene Street will publish up to three poems
per writer.
PROSE: Fiction and essays up to 5000 words. Short fiction,
novel excerpts, personal essays, literary and cultural
criticism, pedagogy, composition and rhetoric, gender
and ethnic studies, liberation theology, etc.
REVIEWS: Book reviews and review-essays of recently published
(within the past 2 calendar years) novels, poetry &
short fiction collections, criticism, or any work
that might be of interest to a general academic or
literary audience. 750-2500 words in length.
Submissions should be singled-spaced and formatted in ASCII text, 67 characters per line, if possible, and sent via email to aff@tenet.edu. Your submission may be included in the body of your message (or "attached" to the message if your mailer is MIME compliant). The work's title and genre should appear in the subject line of the message, e.g.:
SUBJ: FICTION/The Handsomest Drowned Man in the World
ESSAY/Politics and the English Language
POEM/The Second Coming (or five poems)
REVIEW/Pedagogy of the Oppressed (Freire)
Your e-mail and street address should appear at the end of the message in addition to a short paragraph (5-10 lines) that contains biographical information such as previous publications, grants, awards, education, etc. Unless you specify otherwise, your email address will appear in the contributors section in both the ASCII and hypertext versions of the journal.
Previously (print) published work is accepted, as are multiple submissions.
Gruene Street acquires the one-time rights to publish prose and poetry, and to maintain on-line archives that contain current and previously published material.
The editors accept no payment for the work they put into this journal. Writers receive no payment apart from (increased) Internet readership.