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The Antigonish Review

IN MEMORIAM -
DR. GEORGE SANDERSON

The editorial board of
The Antigonish Review
is deeply saddened
by the loss of
George Sanderson,
former editor and
dear friend.
Dr. Sanderson died
in Halifax on November 4, 2005.
He edited the Antigonish Review from 1980 to 2001 with his wife Gertrude. His son, Brendan did art work for the Review.
George will be missed greatly by everyone at The Antigonish Review.

Editorial

TAR Days

My term as editor of The Antigonish Review ends April 2001. My wife Gertrude is also retiring at that time. We have been with the Review since its inception in 1969. I became editor and Gertrude managing editor in 1980. The next two or three numbers will reflect material selected under our editorial direction.

TAR remains indebted to many persons and sources. R.J. MacSween promoted the idea of a literary review that would serve as a vehicle for Atlantic writers when he was still head of the English Department at St. Francis Xavier University in 1969. Rev. Malcolm MacDonell, then Dean of Arts, successfully advanced the proposal within the reigning University Council. MacSween installed Brocard Sewell as the first editor, assuming the editorship himself a year later. MacSween resigned as editor in 1980 but his influence endures. His work was celebrated in a double issue of the Review in 1991(TAR # 87-88).

Successive ST. F.X. administrations have maintained the difficult (and rare) balance of bestowing generous financial support and complete editorial freedom. The Canada Council is also an essential contributor to our existence through its financial support and through the annual remarks, criticisms and suggestions of its Writing and Publications Jury.

It was never intended that TAR be solely a production of the English Department at ST. F.X. The first editorial board was composed of members from English, Philosophy and Modern Languages. This composition was retained over the years and we now also have a member of the Business Administration department (Gerry Trites) on the editorial board. But most of the editors taught in the English department. Kevin O'Brien, Sheldon Currie, Jim Taylor, Bill Tierney, Pat Walsh and later Reynold Stone, all University English teachers, did much valuable work in the first decade of TAR's existence. (Jim, Reynold and Sheldon are still active on TAR's behalf). Veronica Ross, though geographically remote, became an important member of the fiction reading team. About five years ago Erin Penzes and then Tom Hodd added their talents to the screening process. More recently Anne Simpson (Fiction Editor) and Jeanette Lynes (Reviews and Promotion) have become influential members of the editorial board, while continuing to publish their own creative works.

For the last twenty-one years I have been mainly responsible for obtaining and editing non-fiction material. In the seventies and eighties Gertrude translated many Quebecois poets and gradually assumed the important but often unappreciated task of assembling each review, proofreading, selecting and positioning the material according to complex criteria which included the acceptance date of the material, its geographical provenance, its content and relationship to adjacent material and other nuanced considerations.

In the early eighties Frank Macdonald put his graphic design abilities at the disposal of TAR. Frank and I were admirers of McLuhan and other pioneering media thinkers. This editorial collaboration resulted in a double issue of TAR on McLuhan in 1988 (TAR # 74-75) which was later issued in the USA as a book co-edited by us entitled Marshall McLuhan: The Man and His Message. Frank's stylistic discrimination has contributed greatly to TAR's success.

TAR, initially oriented towards Nova Scotia and Atlantic Canada, soon began receiving submissions from other parts of Canada and the USA. Contributions now arrive from many other parts of the world. When MacSween resigned, Peter Sanger, then teaching English at the Nova Scotia Agricultural College in Truro N.S., agreed to become Poetry Editor. He combines a true poetic sensibility with an amazing degree of fortitude, reading and selecting manuscripts from a seemingly inexhaustible supply of established and aspiring poets.

In reviewing these contributions by a variety of talented people it is also important to remark on The Casket Printing & Publishing Printing Company, Ltd. TAR has been printed at The Casket from the beginning. It is the only print shop in Antigonish, its central physical asset a single color Heidelberg. But its more important assets include a variety of talented people who have worked hard over the last thirty-one years to respond to our printing demands. Of the many Casketeers who have helped TAR appear quarterly, Jack MacMillan, Manager of the Printing section, has had the longest association with us. Working with Jack has always been an interesting experience.

TAR has depended, as do most other reviews of its kind, on a large number of people who have volunteered their time and effort, in many cases over decades. Our indispensable part-time secretary and Office Manager, Bonnie McIsaac, is the only salaried person working for the review.

TAR's future is hard to discern. Literary reviews are having trouble retaining subscribers. They resort more and more frequently to contests in which the entry fee pays for a subscription. This ad-hoc situation is clearly unsatisfactory. The by-products of traditional print literacy - detachment and a visually structured inner-space, become endangered species on the electronic veldt. I cannot imagine, on the basis of my experience with computer monitors, that the peculiar pleasures of fiction and poetry can be experienced with the same depth and range and the same cognitive discernment as that yielded by traditional printing on paper. Ho hum.

Lao Tse says that "the sage confronts difficulties, therefore he does not have to experience them."

Check our new website: antigonishreview.com

George Sanderson

 

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Editorial Office:
The Antigonish Review
P.O. Box 5000
Antigonish
Nova Scotia B2G 2W5
Canada
Telephone: (902) 867-3962
Fax: (902) 867-5563
E-mail: tar@stfx.ca

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Last update: July 2, 2008