Jeff
Blackman’s poetry has appeared in periodicals such as Blacklock’s Reporter, In/Words, and The Steel Chisel, the anthology Five
(Apt. 9 Press), and Best Canadian Poetry in English 2015 (Tightrope Books). He keeps warm in Ottawa, Ontario, with
his growing family. Visit jeffblackman2001.wordpress.com for poetry and
downloadable chapbooks.
The Moose and Pussy #1-5 can be read online here, and copies of issues #6-8 are still very
much available through Jeff Blackman via twitter: @jeffblackman2k1
Q: How did TheMoose and Pussy first start?
A: Fellow Carleton student and In/Words
contributor Kate Maxfield and I fell in love in 2006, after a courtship hooked
to writers’ circles and readings. In/Words is Carleton’s student-run literary
press and at the time there were a lot of new spin-off mags, such as the
feminist Vagina Dentata,
first-year-centric Blank Page, and
the French Mot Dit. Our courtship was
inextricably linked to writers’ circles and readings, and we were both writing –
including lots about our own relationship. It wasn’t long before we thought,
heck: let’s start a literary sex magazine. We invited other community-members
Jeremy Hanson-Finger and Rachael Simpson to join us as editors, and launched
our first issue in mid-2007.
Q: Were there any influences on the journal
outside of your immediate circle? Were there any other publications you were
influenced by, or were you responding to what you saw as a lack?
A: In a way, yes, we saw a lack. While some of
us read Literotica and some read Vice, we weren’t aware of magazines
publishing smart sex writing. Even if there were, we still would have gone
ahead, because I think it was more an outlet than anything else. It should be
noted we were young, early 20s, and definitely not the cool kids. We were
outsiders who had found this writing community at Carleton and wanted to make
something together, and to an extent get our ya-yas out. Jeremy was especially
versed in transgressive literature and felt motivated to disrupt the easy and
the safe (he wrote his MA thesis on Pynchon & Wallace), and I think we all
had a bit of that: a belief we would turn heads, and that other people would
flock to the cause.
Q: How did your experience with In/Words shape
the way you approached editing and publishing a magazine?
A: While only I’d been an editor for In/Words,
we’d all been regulars to the weekly writers’ circles, monthly open-mikes, and
help to make a lot of chapbooks. This community experience led to us all
working through selection and design decisions together (at least for the first
few issues), as well as the idea that we should print the magazine ourselves
(which we did for the first two issues).
However, and In/Words’ editor-in-chief Collett
Tracy has rightly said I aimed to leave In/Words in our dust, we definitely
dreamt big. We sought out local advertisers, actively solicited art, even
bringing student Tanya Decarie (now spoken word champ Twiggy Stardust) on as an
illustrator, and got the magazine in stores throughout Ottawa. A few copies
even wound up in Toronto and Montreal shops. We wanted to have a core community
in Ottawa, which meant we still had Valentine’s Day card-making parties and
film screenings, but we loved sending out copies to contributors from around
the world. We wanted to go beyond the university, and we thought ourselves
rather professional – despite being relative virgins to the world of
publishing.
Q: What was the process of soliciting
submissions? Did you initially send out a wide call, or solicit from your
immediate community?
A: We began local, soliciting work from
colleagues in the community. This would have been buttressed by some posters
around Carleton campus and emails sent to In/Words
contributors. We’d been talking the thing up enough that we knew we could put
together an issue largely from our own connections, and it gave us a
contributor & reader base which stayed with us. By issue two, if memory
serves, we were listing ourselves online via submission aggregators.
So from issue one to seven we went from
probably 20 or so submissions to well over a hundred per issue. However for the
final huzzah, issue 8 (Codename: Oral) we directly solicited recorded poems
from previous contributors, with a focus on community members and favourite
contributors.
Q: What kind of response were you getting? Did
you hold launches for individual issues?
A: We held launches, some with In/Words and
some a la carte. Our 2nd launch was part of a fundraiser for Bruce House, a
local residence for people living with AIDS, and we were proud of that one. We
broadcast a documentary about the house (by Taline Bedrossian, now with the
NGC), and the event was co-hosted by the Dusty Owl at Swizzles on Queen. Good
crowd, lots of readers, and we felt we were giving back to a city that had
provided a wealth of contributions and inspiration.
Like anything else though, interest waned. For
the fifth issue, we launched a la carte at Mercury Lounge. We had high hopes
for that one (lots of art, big team, and a different venue) but that event
really soured me. We had a number of readers, fair-sized crowd, but sold almost
no magazines. Sour grapes I know, but I really can’t stand it when people come
to your free event, drink a bunch of beer, but can’t drop five bucks for a
student-run magazine, y’know?
Q: Presuming you were paying for the
publication out of pocket, right? And how was the journal distributed
otherwise?
A: We put a little bit of our own money into it,
but largely we were supported by a combination of advertisement sales, Carleton
Clubs & Societies funding, and magazine sales. Advertisers mostly included
sex shops and head shops (Crosstown Traffic was our most loyal sponsor). We
also had a few fundraiser events, like movie night on campus. The magazine was
sold at events and a number of stores throughout Ottawa including magazine
shops, sex shops, and head shops. We also sold a few individual issues and
subscriptions online, and the mag did wind up in some stores outside Ottawa, on
occasion.
The idea of including ads and focusing on sales
was in part driven by a desire to produce a glossy, high quality magazine, and
not have to depend primarily on the school or fundraising. It was really
fulfilling to be four students in our early twenties going around town securing
ad sales to places like Wicked Wanda’s, and seeing our magazine fly from the
shelves of Mags & Fags and Venus Envy. In that way we weren’t like any
other literary magazine, at least not since sex shops & book shops
intermingled on Toronto's Yonge Street in the 1970’s.
Q: But for the final issue, which listed you as
a single editor, the list of editors grew throughout the run of the journal.
What was the process of working with so many editors for the journal, and how
were final decisions made? Why bring on more editors?
A: For selection, we voted as a committee. For
other decisions, we strived for consensus. We brought on more editors in order
to alleviate the work load as submissions counts increased, and simply because
people were interested.
Q: After eight issues, what was behind the
decision to finally suspend the journal?
A: Around issue seven, the last print issue,
Rachael and Jeremy moved out of Ottawa to pursue this & that; Tanya would
leave shortly thereafter. With the core of the team gone, we lacked the ability
to keep up our production schedule (about three issues a year), and decided to
focus online. For a couple years the magazine was simply a blog Kate & I
maintained. The CD was definitely he last hurrah, one last big to do.
I think also we were getting a bit drained by
the hunt for the good content. As any literary magazine editor can attest, you
have to read a lot of really bad writing before you find much good stuff. With
a literary sex magazine, it was probably doubly so. At a certain point the
whole enterprise was just turning us off. The final issue, the audio one, was
mostly solicited from previous contributors We used what money we’d saved up
and used it to pay an honorarium to all contributors (something we’d never done
before), and it was a nice send-off. We were doing again / for the last time,
what we had set out to do at first, which was build up from a community of
writers a wealth of provocative, meaningful collection of sex writing.
Q: What do you feel your experiences with
In/Words and The Moose & Pussy
might have contributed to your own writing?
A: Those magazines & their communities were
my life for 2007 through 2012, during which time I feel I matured as a writer.
Before then I was still the sort of middle-class beat-wannabe who thought every
one of his diary entries was inspired. It’s hard to say exactly what the
experience of being an editor had on my writing, as at the same time I was
hosting writers’ circles and open-mike nights, editing and producing friends’
chapbooks, and taking writing workshops. It’s impossible to figure out what the
M&P did for my writing, other
than, I hope, make me braver.
Q: Given your experiences with In/Words and The Moose & Pussy, do you see
yourself ever returning to literary publishing?
A: If I have a good idea for something new, I’d
do it. What’d really excite me would be if someone else with a good idea
invited me to help them.
The Moose &
Pussy bibliography:
The Moose & Pussy #1: The Inaugural Issue.
Fall 2008. Editors: Jeff Blackman, Jeremy Hanson-Finger, Kate Maxfield and
Rachael Simpson. Editorial by Jeff Blackman, Jeremy Hanson-Finger, Kate
Maxfield and Rachael Simpson. Sex You Can Read by Aaron Clark, Andrew Battershill,
Anna Sajecki, Ben Ladouceur, Courtney Davis, F.C. Estrella, Jeff Blackman,
Jeremy Hanson-Finger, John Cloutier, Kane X. Faucher, Kate Maxfield, Lindsey N.
Woodward, Natalee Elizabeth Blagden, Nicholas Surges, Owen Hewitt, Peter
Gibbon, Rachael Simpson, Teri Doell and Soggy Tickets. Sex You Can See by Erin
Iverson, Joni Sadler, Nicholas Surges, Robyn Riley and Sarah Flathers.
The Moose & Pussy #2. Winter 2008/2009.
Editors: Jeff Blackman. Jeremy Hanson-Finger, Kate Maxfield and Rachael
Simpson. Editorial by Jeff Blackman. Sex You Can Read by Amanda Earl, Anna
Sajecki, Ben Ladouceur, Calum Marsh, Daniel Zomparelli, F.C. Estrella, Jason
Decker, Kane X. Faucher, Kathleen Brown, Kenneth Pobo, Leah Mol, Lindsey N.
Woodward, Marcus McCann, Mark Sokolowski, Nathaniel Moore, Owen Hewitt, Peggy
Hogan, Richard Scarsbrook, Sonia Saikaley, Teri Doell, Tricia Van der Grient,
Warren Dean Fulton and Poppy Cox. Sex You Can See by Christopher Neglia, Erin
Iverson, Jenn Huzera, Ralitsa Doncheva.
The Moose & Pussy #3: For Pseudonyms,
Souls. Spring 2009. Editors: Jeff Blackman, Jeremy Hanson-Finger, Kate Maxfield
and Rachael Simpson. Editorial: Kate Maxfield. Sex You Can Read by Andrew
Battershill, Andy Sinclair, Bardia Sinaee, Ben Ladouceur, Bill Noble, Brian
Brown, Chad Woody, Edward Lemond, Hauquan Chau, J.J. Persic, Jadon Rempel, John
Oliver Hodges, Jose Fernandez, juniper n.a. quin, Kevin Brown, Leah Mol,
Lindsey N. Woodward, Luke LeBrun, Luna Allison, Madeline Moore, matthew
whitely, Rotem Yaniv, Stephen Joseph, Steve Zytveld, Taline Bedrossian, Teri
Doell and Tom Mallouk. Sex You Can See by Tanya Decarie.
The Moose & Pussy #4: The Animals Issue, or
The Bestiary. Summer/Fall 2009. Editors: Jeff Blackman, Jeremy Hanson-Finger,
Kate Maxfield and Rachael Simpson. Editorial by Rachael Simpson. Sex You Can
Read by Ben Ladouceur, Brendan Inglis, Bryan Borland, Calum Marsh, Chelsey
Storey, David Brennan, Jamie Bradley, Julie Innis, Justin Million, Kate
Maxfield, Kristel Jax, Leah Mol, Mark Burns Cassell, Mark Naser, Peggy Hogan,
Samantha Everts, Shannon Rayne, shawn macmillan and Warren Dean Fulton. Sex You
Can See by Becky Beach, Kristel Jax and Tanya Decarie.
The Moose & Pussy #5: Versus the Sexless
Marriage. Winter 2010. Editors: Jeff Blackman, Jeremy Hanson-Finger, Kate Maxfield,
Rachael Simpson and Tanya Decarie, Editorial by Jeremy Hanson-Finger. Sex You
Can Read by Andrew Battershill, Barbara Foster, Chris Weige, Christine Sirois,
Danielle Blasko, Jenna Jarvis, Jeremy Hanson-Finger, Jessica Azevedo, John
Grochalski, Kasandra Larsen, Katie Moore, Ken Shakin, Pippa Rogers, Rachael
Simpson, Rotem Yaniv, Stephen S. Mills and Tanya Decarie. Sex You Can See by
Kristel Jax and Tanya Decarie.
The Moose & Pussy #6: The Crucifiction
Issue. Spring 2010. Editors: Jeff Blackman, Jeremy Hanson-Finger, Kate
Maxfield, Pippa Rogers, Rachael Simpson and Tanya Decarie. Sex You Can Read by
Andy Sinclair, Bardia Sinaee, Chad Hammett, Chris Carroll, Gus Ginsberg,
Hauquan Chau, Jeff Blackman, Jeff Fry, Jenna Jarvis, Jessica Azevedo, John Harrower,
Kristel Jax, Kristy Logan, Marcus McCann, Matt Dennison, Peter Gibbon, Pippa
Rogers and S. Gabriella. Sex You Can See by Kristel Jax and Tanya Decarie.
The Moose & Pussy #7: The Back to School
Special. Fall 2010. Editors: Jeff Blackman, Jenna Jarvis, Jeremy Hanson-Finger,
Kate Maxfield, Pippa Rogers, Rachael Simpson and Tanya Decarie. Editorial by
Jeff Blackman, Kate Maxfield, Tanya Decarie. Sex You Can Read by Andrew
Battershill, Bardia Sinaee, Christian McPherson, Crystie Lovestrom, Danielle
Blasko, Dave Currie, David Porder, Flower Conroy, Frederick Blichert, Jess
Scott, John Kelly, Josh Nadeau, Lee Minh Sloca, Lisa Slater, Meaghan Rondeau
and patrick mckinnon. Peter Gibbon. Sex You Can See by Kaelan Murray and Tanya
Decarie.
Valentine’s Day Cards. Winter 2011. Sex You Can
Read by Jenna Jarvis, Jeremy Hanson-Finger, Peter Gibbon, jesslyn delia smith, Adrian
Lippert and Cameron Anstee.
self-portrait as the bottom of the sea at the
beginning of time (chapbook). Spring 2011. Sex You Can Read by Ben Ladouceur.
The Moose & Pussy #8: Oral. Winter 2012.
Producer: Jeff Blackman. Sex You Can Hear by Alice Shindelar, Annik
Adey-Babinski, Bardia Sinaee, Ben Ladouceur, David de Bruijn, Diane Seuss, Ezra
Stead, Ivana Velickovic, Jeff Blackman, Jenna Jarvis, Jeremy Behreandt, M.A.
Istvan Jr., Pearl Pirie and Peter Gibbon. Sex You Can See by Illya Kymkiw.
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