Categories
Stories In Focus

Houghton’s Literary Magazine Burns Bright

In an average week students regularly see the campus publications The Houghton Star and The Drawing Board strewn about. To break the monotony about twice a semester a different type of publication hits the stacks, Houghton’s literary magazine, The Lanthorn. With its debut volume hitting campus in May of 1932, The Lanthorn has been an outlet for student writers to showcase creative work outside of the writing classroom. Current Lanthorn editor Ben Murphy, senior, compares the Lanthorn to other non-academic functions around campus; “the student juried art show allows any student to put their work out there [and] Java provides a venue for people to play their own music. We do the same sort of thing, I think.”

academics-headerOften run on a low budget, the Lanthorn publishes a range of creative writing, both poetry and prose, and artwork as well. And while the Lanthorn may have obvious appeal to both English and Writing majors, the Lanthorn accepts and encourages work from all majors, a tradition they’ve strived to maintain.

With that in mind, the Lanthorn has served as a sort of jumping off point for writers to kick-start their careers. Current Academic Dean Linda Mills-Woolsey, vice president for academic affairs, and several of her editorial staff are all prime examples of writers that continue to benefit from their experience and involvement with the Lanthorn. Mills-Woolsey herself has published a range of work, mostly poetry, and a number of her group who first published in the Lanthorn went on to have writing careers.

Writing careers aside, the Lanthorn offers experience for those applying to graduate school and jobs outside of the professional writing sector; 2013 Lanthorn Editor alumna Hannah Hanover, added that “participation and publication in a college’s literary magazine or compilation is highly desirable when applying to graduate school, or even creative positions in the job market.”

While the Lanthorn has the potential to provide valuable professional experience for writers, according to Murphy, it provides an important outlet in offering anonymous publishing, “[it] allows for a safe space for emotions and narratives that may not jive with typical Houghton-friendly issues.” Moreover for students who, like Murphy, “think of words as [their] art,” the Lanthorn plays a major part in “providing a place for wordy-art.”

Like every longstanding publication, the Lanthorn has consistently undergone changes, and this year is no different. This year’s editors worked to “establish a recognizable symbol [marketing brand],” for the Lanthorn according to Murphy, and senior Abby Buckingham handling the design with the help of Caffeinated Creative Studios, in hopes to “better cement the magazine’s presence and identity in students’ minds,” according to Murphy.

Along with this redesign, the Lanthorn has shifted towards encouraging more prose works. “Some years the Lanthorn has been very poetry heavy,” said Murphy, who sees the turn towards prose reflecting his own work as a fiction writer, and added, “I imagine this sort of thing will shift along with whoever is the current editor.” As far as design goes, Hanover mentioned that she and her staff worked to “[bring] back a larger, fuller format for the bi-annual Lanthorn, complete with vibrant color photos and art.” Additionally, a special trend with the Candle has been publishing a “special feature” edition, last year’s featured staff writing and art, and this spring’s featured only flash fiction and haikus.

An enduring Houghton tradition, the next hurdle the Lanthorn faces is the digital age. As the number of college newspapers publishing online continues to rise, the question of the power of print lingers. Murphy weighed the pros and cons, saying, “I think the benefit to print is that we can leave them lying around campus for people to peruse and then leave behind…Also because the edition is selective (we publish probably around 30% of what we receive) I think the quality of work and satisfaction gained from getting in would certainly go out the window,” and on the other hand, “I think there could be something said for a digital version or counterpart of the publication, though it would take a more tech and design savvy editor than myself.”

With the technology debate unsettled, the Lanthorn will no doubt continue its tradition of publishing student work and serving as a true creative outlet for writers campus-wide.

Categories
News

Students Publications Plan for Rest of Semester and Next Year

The Lanthorn and the Drawing Board will be finishing up the year with some new events.  The Lanthorn will be releasing a staff edition of the Lanthorn and will host a storytelling night.  The Drawing Board will be ending this semester with a color issue for the first time in at least four years.

Both the editors of the Lanthorn, Megan Specksgoor and Hannah Hanover, as well as Patricia Powles, the editor of the Drawing Board, will be graduating at the end of this semester, and so new editors will be coming to take their place.  Leah Doty, junior, will be replacing Powles as editor of the Drawing Board and the next editor of the Lanthorn has not be chosen yet. Applications for this position are available online through Survey Monkey, and they are due no later than Monday, April 15.

20_4.12.2013_News_StudentPublicationsOne“She [Leah Doty] is going to be great,” said Powles.

The Drawing Board hopes that the color issue will be much different than the regular issues not only because it is in color, but also because it will hopefully be a larger in size.

The Lanthorn’s last publication this year will be an issue with all staff material; usually, The Lanthorn takes submissions from the student body and then as a staff chooses which pieces to publish. By publishing an all-staff issue, The Lanthorn hopes to show a different side of their publication.

“People doesn’t always realize that we have very creative and talented staff,” said Specksgoor.

As part of their year-end activities, The Lanthorn will also be hosting a storytelling night.

“We want to go back to the oral tradition,” said Specksgoor.

In looking ahead to the coming years, the current Lanthorn editors plan to encourage the new editors next year to start a website, which would offer the opportunity for creative writers at Houghton to get their work published to a larger audience.

A website could also open up Houghton to prospective students. Hanover said, “That way when prospective writing students and art students look at [the website] they see a venue for publishing.”

Hanover and Specksgoor hope for editors who share a similar vision for the Lanthorn next year: one of branching out and reaching all of Houghton’s community.

“We really want it to be less of a ‘here are twenty English majors on a pedestal’ kind of thing . . . we really want it to be more open so that everyone can feel included,” said Specksgoor.