Volume 8, Issue 2 (2020)
Dear Readers,
Normally we take time here to welcome you into the issue, and to tie the works within it together in a way that gives you some sense of the context of the journal and the value of our mission. The present being what it is, we feel an even more pressing urge to speak deep truths about literature, art, and life. It’s time to be profound. Please excuse us if we are not up to the task.
COVID-19 has transformed the context of our production and the daily context of all of our lives. The death toll in New York state alone has, at the time of writing this, surpassed 15,000. The struggles for all people, but especially the most vulnerable in our society, are severe. Given the transition to online education, the production of Gandy Dancer was different than it has ever been before. Due to the cancelation of our Visiting Writers series, you will note that this semester’s publication lacks our usual book review and author interview.
Luckily, technology has allowed us to stay connected enough to produce a journal we’re proud of, even in the wake of the unrest around us. Gandy Dancer’s mission is to connect readers, writers, and artists of all kinds across all SUNY schools. How timely. It’s easy to feel isolated in a time where we’re not in our classrooms, we’re not attending club meetings, and we’re not making art in the same way we were. But many of us are still making art.
Engaging with that art and literature feels equal parts impossible and necessary. We offer you this journal as a multipurpose tool. That is to say, we hope you will utilize this journal in whatever way, or ways, you need. Two purposes strike us as equally important. The first being escape, whether that be into the lives of characters and speakers, or into the words of a poem. We cannot, in good conscience, call Gandy Dancer a light read, but the contents of this issue are as engaging and vital as ever.
The second purpose we seek with this issue is one of reckoning. Through our “Remote Voices: Posts from the Pandemic” section, we want to invite you to face this moment through art. Why engage with challenging things during a challenging time? Maybe because when everything is terrible, sometimes it is just as relieving to cry as it is to laugh. Maybe because it is comforting to see you are not the only one who is angry and confused and worried. Find catharsis in the idea that, as Evan Goldstein puts it in his poem “Litany in April,” “your kindness was good, your anger / is good… and you were good.”
With that being said, we encourage you, to the very best of your ability, to continue making and enjoying art. Gandy Dancer exists as a lasting testament to the connections we have to each other, through the SUNY System, and beyond that, the connection we have to all people through our creative work. Maintain existing connections, make new connections when possible, and support one another endlessly. You are not alone in this.
Your friends,
Nicole Callahan & Natalie Hayes
April 2020
Poetry
You don’t even live there anymore
Claire Corbeaux, SUNY Geneseo
Oil and Wine // Northern Gold
Jack White, SUNY Brockport
how to immortalize a body // listen: to give attention to one’s sound
Julia Rose Merante, SUNY Geneseo
There is // butterfly tattoo
Daniel Fleischman, SUNY Geneseo
The Language of Physics Between Two Bodies // Miseducation
Kiel M. Gregory, SUNY Oswego
I have heard You calling in the night
Kat Johnson, SUNY Geneseo
Un-disorders // Campfire Songs
Mitchell Angelo, SUNY Purchase
Dead Ladybugs on my Window
Amy Middleton, SUNY Purchase
Remote Voices: Salt Lake City // Litany in April
Evan Goldstein, SUNY Geneseo
Remote Voices: Mad Girl’s Delirium
Ashley Hajimirsadeghi, SUNY FIT
Fiction
Under the aEgis
DongWon Oh, SUNY Geneseo
Featuring: The Calamity
Alex Simmons, SUNY Fredonia
The Biggest Drill
Carly Sorenson, SUNY Purchase
Remote Voices: Outside
Misty Yarnall, Monroe Community College
Creative Nonfiction
Chasing Reflections
Daniel Fleischman, SUNY Geneseo
Remote Voices: Holding My Breath
D’Arcy Hearn, SUNY Geneseo
Art
Dealer // Reaper
Erika Snyder, SUNY Plattsburgh
Figure Study // White Face // Still Life // Make-Up & Reflections
Hunter Celeste, SUNY Plattsburgh
Shape Shifter // Ether
Kailey Maher, SUNY Plattsburgh
Two to One
Erin Doescher, SUNY Plattsburgh
Postscript
Resting Wings
Gabrielle Esposito, SUNY Albany
Editorial Team
- Managing Editors
- Nicole Callahan, Natalie Hayes
- Fiction Edito
- Troy Seefried
- Creative Nonfiction Editor
- Jesper Chitsaz
- Poetry Editor
- Lyndsay Tudman
- Art Editor
- Sara Devoe
- Public Relations Coordinator
- David Beyea
- Fiction Readers
- Jay Bang, David Beyea, Sara Devoe, Laura Gikas, Molley Gross, Hemingway Lovullo
- Creative Nonfiction Readers
- Jordyn Costello, Jamie Henshaw, Lara Mangino, John Mattison, Joe Sharak
- Poetry Readers
- Maggie Aldrich, Shakira Browne, Julia Caldwell, Sarah Channels, Brian Faraczek, Olivia Zambri
- Assistant Art Editors
- Sarah Channels, Jamie Henshaw
- Faculty Advisor
- Rachel Hall
- Production Advisor
- Allison Brown
- Advisory Editors
- Christy Agrawal, Dan DeZarn, Kristen Gentry, Lucia LoTempio, Courtney O’Gorman, Lytton Smith, Kathryn Waring
- Special thanks to:
- the Parry family
Cover photo: Frank by Brian Menia