a public space – Three Percent /College/translation/threepercent a resource for international literature at the University of Rochester Mon, 16 Apr 2018 17:38:55 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.9.4 Three Percent #13: Literary Journals, Why We Don't Read Short Stories, and the $%#@ing Brewers /College/translation/threepercent/2011/08/23/three-percent-13-literary-journals-why-we-dont-read-short-stories-and-the-ing-brewers/ Tue, 23 Aug 2011 20:05:10 +0000 http://www.wdev.rochester.edu/College/translation/threepercent-dev/2011/08/23/three-percent-13-literary-journals-why-we-dont-read-short-stories-and-the-ing-brewers/ For this week’s podcast, Tom and I answered our first mailbag question about literary journals, discussed the old adage that “short stories don’t sell,” and complained about the unbeatable Milwaukee Brewers.

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For this week’s podcast, Tom and I answered our first mailbag question about literary journals, discussed the old adage that “short stories don’t sell,” and complained about the unbeatable Milwaukee Brewers.

(We also talk a bit about my son’s obsession with all 19 seasons of the Mighty Morphin Power Rangers. In fact, if you listen till the end, you can hear Aidan talk about it himself . . .)

Of course, we managed to forget a few obvious literary journals, but here’s a short list of ones we talked about, and a couple we didn’t:

  • Monkey Business

Feel free to send some hate mail about all the journals we skipped over . . .

Also, we’re planning on doing an episode on “Books You Should’ve Read in College,” so if you have any suggestions—or any other comments—email me at chad.post [at] rochester.edu.

This week’s song is by Soft Landing.

As always you can subscribe to the podcast in iTunes by clicking . To subscribe with other podcast downloading software, such as Google’s , copy the following link.

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Monkey Business [APS's Japanese Expansion] /College/translation/threepercent/2011/04/25/monkey-business-apss-japanese-expansion/ /College/translation/threepercent/2011/04/25/monkey-business-apss-japanese-expansion/#respond Mon, 25 Apr 2011 14:31:05 +0000 http://www.wdev.rochester.edu/College/translation/threepercent-dev/2011/04/25/monkey-business-apss-japanese-expansion/ A Public Space has always been dedicated to promoting international literature, so it’s not all that surprising that Brigid Hughes has joined forces with Roland Kelts (author of ), (professor of Japanese lit) and (translator into Japanese of Pynchon [!] and a number of other great American writers) to produce an American version of a journal highlighting new writing from Japan.

Monkey Business was founded in Japan in 2008, and, according to Shibata, is modeled in part after APS. It’s also named after the “immortal Chuck Berry tune.” According to Shibata, “No other work of art that I know of deals with the aggravations we face every day so straightforwardly and with such liberating humor. That is the guiding star we follow on this journey.”

The debut English language edition of MB culls the best writing from the first ten issues published in Japan. It was edited by Shibata and Ted Goossen, a professor at York University in Toronto and general editor of the Oxford Book of Japanese Short Stories who has translated work by Murakami, Naoya Shiga, Masuji Ibuse and others. Hughes and Kelts contributed to the English language editing. Stories, poetry, interviews and even a manga, or Japanese comic, reimagining Franz Kafka’s The Country Doctor, grace its pages.

I was too busy this past weekend watching St. Louis take over first place in the NL Central to read through this carefully, but on first glance, I think it will be a vital contribution to Japanesse literature in English. As a publisher, I’ll say that aside from the Japanese Literature Publishing Project, it’s tricky getting good recommendations of Japanese literature. There are a series of posts waiting to be (re)written about this issue, but suffice it to say that with a single 150 page volume, MB has instantly become one of the best sources for info on new “pure literature” coming out of Japan.

In addition to the aforementioned Kafka manga (that runs from right to life [fuckyeahalternativereadingstyles] going from page 137 to 118), this first issue includes a number of interesting looking pieces, including a poem by Inuo Taguchi (translated by Ted Goossen) entitled “Interviews with the Heroes, or Is Baseball Just for Fun?,” a story by Koji Uno (translated by Jay Rubin), a collection of vignettes by Manazuru author Hiromi Kawakami (translated by Ted Goossen), and short story by Hideo Furukawa (translated by Michael Emmerich) that opens like this:

There is no answer. And why not? Because there’s no question. All we’ve got is the fact that the monster is there. And it’s hibernating. That’s stage number one. From here, we move on to stage number two, stage number three. The last stage is more or less identical to the first, so the whole thing is a sort of “cyclical motion,” you might say. But let’s not get ahead of ourselves. There can be no question that first of all we must address—observe, describe—the movement from the first stage to the second. The monster is there, hibernating . . . or rather, it was hibernating. It’s just woken up.

You can and if you happen to be in NYC over the next couple weeks, you can attend one or more of the taking place at the Asia Society, Book Court, and the Japan Society.

I’ll leave off with a bit of Motoyuki Shibata’s “Monkey Business manifesto,” which appeared in the first Japanese issue of the journal:

Monkey Business is the newly founded journal of new writing from Japan and abroad with a few not-so-new works strategically slipped in. We offer nothing in the way of a “concept” or “lifestyle” aimed at a particular age bracket or social group, no useful information to help you get ahead. And we utterly lack that noble desire to provide a sanctuary from the whirl of daily life. If you gain any of these benefits, so much the better, but they are not our goals. Neither, we must add, do we have a radical agenda. Our intent is not to attack the system, whether it be artistic, political, or social. In fact, we aren’t out to pick a fight with anyone, right or left, old or young, conservative or radical.

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A Public Space: Issue 6 /College/translation/threepercent/2008/08/15/a-public-space-issue-6/ /College/translation/threepercent/2008/08/15/a-public-space-issue-6/#respond Fri, 15 Aug 2008 13:44:53 +0000 http://www.wdev.rochester.edu/College/translation/threepercent-dev/2008/08/15/a-public-space-issue-6/ The new issue of arrived a couple days ago and, as always, is filled with interesting pieces.

I think it’s pretty cool that “All Foreigners Beep” from Dubravka Ugresic’s new collection Nobody’s Home leads off the issue, especially since this is one of the funniest pieces in the book.

And I really like the “Letter Home” in which Colleen Kinder “Defines Iceland” and includes one of my favorite things to tell people about Iceland:

Phone book: Listed by first names.

Why: The surname here is only a father’s tag. For example, Molly Kinder = Molly Drewsdottir (Drew’s daughter.) Bush = Georg Georgsson.

Recommended Reading: The phone book. Particularly if you are looking, say, for Americans living in Iceland. Amid the long columns of Injibjorgs and Gudmundurs, a Frank leaps right out.

Frank: A ninety-six-year-old American living in Iceland. Though when he boarded his military ship in 1941, Frank was told only the code name of his destination: “Blue Indigo.”

Also very cool is this issue’s focus on Italy that includes pieces by Antonio Tabucchi, Salvatore Niffoi, Dacia Maraini, and Erri de Luca, and interviews with Marcello Fois and Antonio Scurati. And the whole section begins with an intriguing intro by translator Will Schutt :

One of the most prominent genres of current Italian fiction, both popular and literary, is the giallo or mystery story. In the hands of literary writers, the giallo turns quirkily metaphysical and, at times, metafictional—keen on investigating essential mysteries of language and its bearing on identity. [. . .]

In the short fictions that follow, formal combinations of the straight-up mystery, the historical narrative, and the fantastic tale serve to magnify divisiveness, paradox and impenetrability, qualities emblematic of the culture’s spirit. Although none of the stories’ protagonists is a detective per se, each is engaged in some kind of detective work.

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A Public Space #5 /College/translation/threepercent/2008/01/29/a-public-space-5/ /College/translation/threepercent/2008/01/29/a-public-space-5/#respond Tue, 29 Jan 2008 19:48:18 +0000 http://www.wdev.rochester.edu/College/translation/threepercent-dev/2008/01/29/a-public-space-5/ The of A Public Space is just out . . . Actually, it’s shipping next week, so it may not technically be “out” just yet . . . Anyway, it looks to be another fine issue with fiction from Mario Bellatin (whose books can be a bit disturbing in a subtle, eerie way, such as in Beauty Salon), an essay by Roland Kelts on Japan, and poetry by Roberto Bolano, Tomaz Salamun, and Craig Morgan Teicher.

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A Public Space, Issue 4 /College/translation/threepercent/2007/08/02/a-public-space-issue-4/ /College/translation/threepercent/2007/08/02/a-public-space-issue-4/#respond Thu, 02 Aug 2007 18:23:45 +0000 http://www.wdev.rochester.edu/College/translation/threepercent-dev/2007/08/02/a-public-space-issue-4/ Thanks to Emily Cook (currently subbing for Jessa over at ) for pointing out that excerpts from the forthcoming issue of are now available online.

A Public Space continues to impress with pieces in the new issue from William T. Vollmann, Samantha Hunt, Bernadette Mayer, and a by Jillian Weise.

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