Welcome to the Fall 2020 issue of Unearthed!
At the beginning of this past September, seven ESF students volunteered to help edit and build this semester’s issue of Unearthed. Together, they met frequently to discuss submissions, mission, and themes. As a team, we discussed how this issue might differ from those of the past; we agreed that choosing a sub-theme would help us both discuss and support the wide array of incredible work being produced during these fractured times. At first, we proposed change. Then, we came across the word “unravel” and it wasn’t long before that word kept us all immersed, transfixed.
This issue begins with some of our student editors introducing readers and listeners to the theme of unravel with an audio story. It is followed by an interview with the outstanding writer Scott Russell Sanders, who has for decades dedicated his life and work to being a steward of Earth. The issue itself includes work from over twenty writers and artists. There is poetry, fiction, nonfiction, and photography. You will read texts focused on and disrupted by place; you will view images that capture people and spaces mid-unravel; you will find work from students at SUNY-ESF and much more from across the globe; most of all, hopefully you will share with us in how each of these contributions unearths and unravels ideas, theories, emotions, and truths.
This has been a challenging season to put an issue together. Due to Covid-19, how we read and encounter writing and art has drastically changed for many of us, so we hope you can find a space to hang out, whether it be for reflection or escape or immersion or just enjoyment.
The challenging fact for us at Unearthed has always been that we often have to turn down good work. Issues strum together their own shape, and each flickers from a new island. That said, we always encourage writers and artists to submit again in the future, and we look forward to another issue in the spring.
Special thanks to the student editorial board who helped generate energy behind this issue, and curate its shape. They are:
Anna Chwiejczak, Natalie Davey (whose image is the banner image on our home page), Gavin Duncan, Lindsay Eberhart (who also supplied many of the lead images for the text), Gillian Hall, Arik Palileo, and Courtney Scheffler.
This issue could also not have been made possible without the support of the the Writing, Rhetoric & Communications Program, and Joel Shaw, from the Office of Communications and Marketing at SUNY-ESF.
Feel free to email us at [email protected] with any questions. In the meantime, enjoy this issue (scroll down to see the issue in alphabetical order, or click on any links for quick access).
Cheers, Tyler Flynn Dorholt
Managing Editor
Editor’s Audio Introduction to “Unravel”
Poetry
Matthew J. Andrews: poems/ Glenn Bach: poems / Anna Chwiejczak: poetry / Shannon Cuthbert: poems / Gavin Duncan: poems / Audrey Fatone: poetry/ Charlotte Friedman: poems / Steve Lang: poems / Mercedes Lawry: poems/ Christopher Linforth: poetry/ Tracy Sallows: poems / Sophie Strand: poems/ Aubree Tillett: poems
Prose
Tyler Dorholt: An Interview with Scott Russell Sanders/ Natalie Davey: “I’m One of Those Rock Collection Kids“/Jamie Hudalla: “The Liminality of Mr. Movies” / Kateri Kramer: “An Obituary for the Land“/ Kristina Saccone: “Fireworks on the Moon” / Chelsey J. Waters: “Reunion on the St. Joe” / Chila Woychik: “A Typical Week of Rural Disquiet“
Visual Arts
Marianka Campisi: photography/ Natalie Davey: photography/ Kari A. Guilbault: photography/ Gillian Hall: photography/ Silven Liu photography/ Matthew McGlennen: photography/ Courtney Rile: photography
Featured image by Unsplash
Unravel: an Audio Story from the Editors
What does unravel mean to you?
An Interview with Scott Russell Sanders
When I use the word unravel to describe the effect of human actions on Earth’s living systems, I’m invoking the metaphor of the web of life.
Three Poems by Matthew J.Andrews
Yet the hunger remains, and even today /you can seem them on the horizon / like an impending storm
Excerpts from ATLAS by Glenn Bach
Not in any lifetimes / will the damage be undone.
Photographs by Marianka Campisi
The first meaning that I associate with 'unraveling' is the idea of letting go.
Poetry by Anna Chwiejczak
She rests / on a damp rock / that juts from the lake—its tongue froths over / her perch.
Two Poems by Shannon Cuthbert
And all the gray places / We never before breathed into being.
Photographs by Natalie Davey
I realized that this photo series reminds us not of where to escape to but the where and the how to return to.
I’m One of Those Rock Collection Kids, by Natalie Davey
Today was the first day it really felt like spring, but spring doesn’t carry quite the same relief as it usually does
Three Poems by Gavin Duncan
A collection of dreamy poems
Poetry by Audrey Fatone
and I want the fossils of us to live in the rock long after we die / after the great great grandchildren of our generation die
Three Poems by Charlotte Friedman
I want to go back to the crush close push press / of unfamiliar bodies, sweat stink and soft punch / of day-old powdery perfume
Photographs by Kari A. Guilbault
The images display a disintegration of form communicating a passage of time and resemble painful bodily experiences.
Photographs by Gillian Hall
Photographs
The Liminality of Mr. Movies by Jamie Hudalla
It smells like damp popcorn inside and a chunky TV tilts off the left wall
An Obituary for the Land by Kateri Kramer
For months now, when I walk down to my car in the early mornings, it is coated in a thin blanket of ash
Three Poems by Steve Lang
As, scrabbling tragically he slides / Into breathless air, so thin, to land / With an unechoed thud, instant husk,
Photographs by Silven Liu
The extreme cold and the snow on the highway nearly killed us, but we were lucky to see beautiful things that many people have never seen.
Three Poems by Mercedes Lawry
Everyone was hungry. Everyone / pulled their arms and legs tight against / themselves, feeble cocoons.
Poetry by Christopher Linforth
What can I offer this strange creature whose / slowed heartbeat is the opposite of mine?
Photographs by Matthew McGlennen
I love the ambiguity of unravel - it can represent destruction, just as it can represent cleansing. It can speak to the unrelenting forces beyond our control, or the simple, deliberate act of undoing.
Photographs by Courtney Rile
On the shoreline, there is a constant battle for sovereignty. These images explore the effects of Hurricane Sandy and reconstruction efforts within the landscape over time.
Fireworks on the Moon by Kristina Saccone
The moon was an achievement for all of us. It was also a dimly lit, grey place, where revelry was what we made of it.
Poetry by Tracy Sallows
Belongings dispersed and distributed / Are treasures in some other troves
Five Poems by Sophie Strand
Lately, the coffee has been strong, the friends / plentiful as maple keys spinning on the breeze
Five Poems by Aubree Tillett
One hour a day I trade / an urban jungle for a garden / bed where compost soil rests
Reunion on the St. Joe by Chelsey J. Waters
She glances downstream toward a big evergreen—a white pine, maybe?
A Typical Week of Rural Disquiet by Chila Woychik
Oh, hello. You must be new here. First off, Iowa is weather and corn.