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About Us"The Capilano Review has, for over thirty years, provided a measure to the innovative and contemporary and a productive site for a generation of literary and artistic boundary walkers. Its editors have provoked and sustained imagination and possibility for a wide range of writers and artists. The TCR is a crucial voice to the continuing surge of west coast and Canadian culture." Fred Wah The Capilano Review has a long history of publishing new and established Canadian writers and artists who are experimenting with or expanding the boundaries of conventional forms and contexts. International writers and artists appear in our pages too. Now in its 38th year, the magazine continues to favour the risky, the provocative, the innovative, and the dissident. Recently we have published work by Ted Byrne, Lisa Robertson, Clint Burnham, Alan Davies, Daphne Marlatt, Eliot Weinberger, Rodrigo Toscano, Marian Penner Bancroft, and others. Over the years, special issues have featured the work of Michael Ondaatje, Daphne Marlatt, Gathie Falk, Jack Chambers, Roy Kiyooka, Arthur Erickson, bill bissett, Gerry Shikatani. Special topics have included B.C. Women Writers and Artists; Poets of the North (BC); Little Magazines in Canada; War, Grief and Poetics, Six Cities, Artifice and Intelligence. Recent issues include interviews with TCR Writers-in-Residence such as August Kleinzahler, Peter Quartermain, Ingrid de Kok, Fred Wah, and Tom Cone. Masthead
The Capilano Review is a member of the Canadian Magazine Publishers Association and the B.C. Association of Magazine Publishers. The Capilano Review is listed with the Canadian Periodical Index, available on-line through Info Globe, and with the American Humanities Index. Microfilm editions and reprints are available from the Bell + Howell Information and Learning Company, Ann Arbor, Michigan. The Capilano Review gratefully acknowledges the financial assistance of Friends of TCR, of Capilano University, the Canada Council for the Arts, the BC Arts Council, the Government of Canada through the Canada Magazines Fund, and the North Vancouver Office of Cultural Affairs. |
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