Since 1958, The Phoenix has showcased poetry, prose, photographs and illustrations from the EMU community. The release party for the spring 2017 issue is Friday, April 21, at 8 p.m. in Common Grounds. Editors Justine Nolt (left) and Lauren Eckenroad discuss selections in the background. (Photos by Andrew Strack)

‘The Phoenix’ celebrates 60th edition

When Justine Nolt visited campus as a high school student, she picked up a copy of The Phoenix, Eastern Mennonite University’s literary and visual arts journal.

“I remember knowing I wanted to have a hand in its creation during my time here,” said the junior Writing Studies major.

Little did she know, her editorial debut would be the journal’s 60th edition. The editing process for this spring’s journal was both harder—and easier—than she anticipated.

“Usually a poem or picture would ask to be included and we couldn’t say, ‘No,’” she said with a smile.

Editors Allie Sawyer, Justine Nolt and Lauren Eckenroad discuss selections. Not shown: Kate Weaver.

View past issues of The Phoenix.

Since 1958, The Phoenix has showcased poetry, prose, photographs and illustrations from the EMU community once a year. Now, the journal’s biannual release is accompanied by a new class that offers a credit hour for 40 hours of Phoenix work.

The editorial team also includes sophomore Allie Sawyer, an English education major and Writing Studies minor; junior Kate Weaver, an English and English education double major with minors in Spanish and Honors; and senior Lauren Eckenroad, a digital media major.

The release party for this semester’s issue is Friday, April 21, at 8 p.m. in Common Grounds.

Submissions invited from all on campus

In February, Nolt and Sawyer send an appealing email to the entire campus: “Let the writer or photographer in you shine through, even if you’re up to your eyeballs in nursing clinicals, chemistry labs, dismantling capitalism, accounting spreadsheets, case studies, or restorative justice … It’s gonna be #lit.”

With guidance from faculty advisor Kevin Seidel, the team selected then submissions through discussion and debate – after delving into a lengthy reading list.

“Home, Parts I and 2,” by Nicole Litwiller, featured artist.

“The hardest part was trying to limit the number of Middle East poems, and then putting a bunch of them in anyway because they were great,” says Nolt.

Weaver and Nolt hope their readership forges an emotional connection to the selected pieces and the students who produced them.

Says Nolt, “I would love for someone to go up to Liesl Graber or Macson McGuigan or Azariah Cox and say, ‘Hey, I saw your work in the Phoenix! I’d love to hear the story behind it.’”

“I’ve loved reading the different poetry that my peers have created,” says Sawyer. “It gives me insight into who they are and what they appreciate in a way that a normal conversation can’t always do.”

Featured Contributors

“Ouro” by Ariel Barbosa is among the featured photographs in The Phoenix.

Writers: Kaitlin Abrahams, Diego Barahona, Savannah Olshove, Caleb Schrock-Hurst, Amanda Williams, Liesl Graber, Luke Mullet, Megan Bishop, Justine Nolt, Naomi Scoville, Elizabeth Nisly, Megan Good.

Photographers: Scott Eyre, Robert Weaver, Macson McGuigan, Ariel Barbosa, Dylan Buchanan, Carissa Luginbill, Andrea Cable, Azariah Cox, Lauren Eckenroad, Julian Bussells, Esther Ghale.

Artists: Nicole Litwiller, Robyn Cordle, Joaquin Sosa, Rachel Holderman.

Discussion on “‘The Phoenix’ celebrates 60th edition

  1. I wonder how Phoenix got started 60 years ago. I think my dad, Irvin Horst, who was an EMU professor, might have been involved. I certainly remember watching my mother add watercolour touches to the cover design of an early edition. Thanks for the memories!

  2. Wouldn’t it be interesting to have an issue that included contributions from EMC/EMU alumni? I think I was responsible for a controversial sketch (perhaps cover?) back sometime between 1975-1979! This time round it would probably be a poem.

    AND . . . Marlise Horst . . . if you are reading posts after yours, what a blast from the past! If you don’t remember me, it’s Janet Marlise Ruth . . . guess who was the inspiration for my middle name?!

  3. Have you archived any issues back as far as 1966,67 when I had several photos in those issues.

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