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About SLS
SLS is premised on the not-so-novel idea that one's writing can
greatly benefit from the keen sense of temporary displacement
created by an immersion in a thoroughly foreign culture and street
vernacular; that one's removing himself/herself from the routine
context of his/her life, of one's own free will, tends to provide
for a creative jolt, as it were?by offering up a wholly new perspective,
new angle of looking at the customary and the mundane.
SLS in St. Petersburg,
Russia, was first held in 1999. We've prided ourselves on bringing
together the finest American, Canadian, European, and African
writers and literary scholars with their Russian counterparts
in a four-week flurry of writing related activities in the midst
of the literary landscape that is St. Petersburg.
In 2001 SLS launched its new sister program,
SLS-Kenya. For many years, however, because of local and global
circumstances, the program had to be postponed. In 2005 we held
our first large scale program hosting a dozen faculty members
and nearly fifty North American and East African participants.
We now hold the program annually, using the capitol of Nairobi
and the medieval stone town of Lamu as our primary locations.
Summer Literary Seminars is a charitable, Non-Profit
corporation as organized under section 501(c)3 of the IRS tax
code. Our Tax ID is 57-1179618; our exemption determination letter
is kept on file and copies are available upon request. We're affiliated
with Herzen
University in St. Petersburg and a number of universities
within the US which provide graduate and undergraduate credit
for students taking our courses. Other affiliations include the
largest circulation Canadian general interest magazine The Walrus,
which publishes our contest
winners and cosponsors the contest. In the past we
have worked with the online anthology
Russianpoetry.net, which we partnered with to record videos
of Russia's leading contemporary poets during SLS 2002; the literary
publisher
Dalkey Archive Press, which used SLS as a homebase to assess
the landscape of contemporary Russian literature for its Russian
Literature series; the literary journal
Fence which published the winners of our 2004 and 2005 contests;
Tin House
magazine which published the winners and many finalists for our
2002 and 2003 writing contests. See our Friends and Affiliates
section on our links page for
more.
The SLS Board of Directors includes:
David Beaty (Independent Writer)
James Boobar (University of Redlands)
Thomas Burke (University of Massachusetts)
Elizabeth Hodges (St. Petersburg Review)
Mikhail Iossel (Concordia University)
Lucy Jilka (Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars)
Joshua Knelman (The Walrus magazine)
Linda Leith (Blue Metropolis Foundation)
Sam Lipsyte (Columbia University)
Phillip Lopate (Hofstra University)
Fiona McCrae (Graywolf Press)
Josip Novakovich (Pennsylvania State University)
Jeff Parker (University of Toronto)
Catherine Tice (New York Review of Books)
Binyavanga Wainaina (Kwani? Literary Trust/Journal)
The following are the key officers and employees:
Mikhail
Iossel, CEO and Director. Mikhail Iossel was born in
Leningrad, USSR, where he worked as an electromagnetic engineer
and belonged to a circle of underground ("samizdat")
writers, and emigrated to the United States in 1986. After receiving
an MA degree in English/Creative Writing from the University
of New Hampshire, he was awarded a Wallace Stegner fellowship
in fiction at Stanford University. He subsequently taught creative
writing, both on the undergraduate and graduate levels, at the
University of Minnesota, New York University, the New School,
St. Lawrence University, Union College and currently is on the
faculty of the Concordia University (Montreal, Canada) writing
program. Numerous publications in samizdat magazines in the
former Soviet Union. Author of Every Hunter Wants to Know,
a collection of stories (W.W. Norton) and co-editor (with Jeff
Parker) of Amerika:
Russian Writers View the United States (Dalkey Archive,
2004). a book of essays. Stories published in literary magazines
in the US and abroad, translated in several foreign languages,
anthologized in Best American Short Stories and elsewhere.
Recipient of the NEA (1993) and the Guggenheim Foundation fellowships
(1999). Founder (in 1998) and executive director of the Summer
Literary Seminars, Inc., program--one of the world's largest
international literary conferences (St. Petersburg, Russia;
Nairobi-Lamu, Kenya).
Jeff
Parker, Chief Operations Officer and Russia Program
Director. Jeff Parker's fiction, nonfiction, and hypermedia
have appeared in The Best American Nonrequired Reading,
Ploughshares, Tin House, Hobart,
The Iowa Review, The Walrus, and other publications. His novel Ovenman was published by Tin House Books in Summer
2007, and his cycle of stories The Back of the Line
in collaboration with artist William Powhida will be released
by DECODE Art Publishers in the Fall. For his work in hypermedia,
he received a grant from the National Endowment for the Humanities
in 2001. He co-edited the essay collection Amerika:
Russian Writers View the United States (Dalkey Archive,
2004) with Mikhail Iossel. He has a BA in Journalism from the
University of Florida and an MFA in Creative Writing from Syracuse
University, and he is currently an Assistant Professor of English at the University of Toronto, where he directs the
interdisciplinary MA program. He sits on the Boards of Directors
for SixBillion.org.
He has worked with SLS since 1999 and is the Russia Program
Director and Chief Operations Officer. He lives in Toronto.
Thomas
Burke, Board Secretary, Kenya Program Co-Director, and Russia Program
Assistant Director. Mr. Burke grew up outside Chicago and writes
fiction and nonfiction. He received a BA from Union College
and an MFA from UMASS Amherst. He has lived in Asia and Europe,
and spent time in South America, Central America, and Africa
. He teaches writing and lives in New York City.
John Goldbach, Program Assistant. John received
his MA from Concordia University in Montreal, where he lives.
Mike
Spry, Programs Coordinator.Mike Spry lives in Montreal where he is the Managing Editor of Matrix magazine. He is a graduate of the Concordia University Creative Writing program, and the author of Jack (Snare Books, 2008).
For further information on SLS contact
us.
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