Oxford American

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Oxford American
File:Oxford American (magazine) Spring 2005 cover.jpg
Spring 2005 cover
Editor Roger Hodge[1]
Former editors Marc Smirnoff
Categories Art and culture
Frequency Quarterly
Publisher Ray Wittenberg
Founder Marc Smirnoff
Year founded 1989
First issue March 14, 1992 (1992-03-14)
Company University of Central Arkansas
Country United States
Based in Conway, Arkansas
Website oxfordamerican.org
ISSN 1074-4525

The Oxford American is an American quarterly literary magazine "dedicated to featuring the very best in Southern writing while documenting the complexity and vitality of the American South."[2]

First publication

The magazine was begun in late 1989 in Oxford, Mississippi, by Marc Smirnoff (born July 11, 1963).[3] Smirnoff, a native of Mill Valley, California, a suburb of San Francisco, arrived in Oxford after his BMW sedan broke down in the midst of a cross-country excursion in late 1987. While waiting for the car to be repaired, he secured a job at the independent Oxford bookstore Square Books.[citation needed]

At the bookstore, he met writers who passed through on author tours and local authors like John Grisham, Larry Brown, Barry Hannah, and Willie Morris. Smirnoff thus decided that the South needed a general interest magazine like The Atlantic Monthly or The New Yorker which focused on regional writers and culture. Smirnoff then began an in-depth study of the history of magazines in America at the University of Mississippi main library and read back issues of American general interest magazines.[citation needed]

The name "Oxford American" is a play on The American Mercury, H. L. Mencken's general interest magazine which Smirnoff long admired. Once he decided to start the magazine, Smirnoff wrote letters to American writers like John Updike, Richard Ford, Charles Bukowski, and William Steig to ask for contributions to the magazine. As a result, many writers donated work to the debut issue without requiring payment. Financed entirely through credit cards, donations from Smirnoff's friends and family, the magazine's debut issue was published on Saturday, March 14, 1992. The cover of the first issue featured a fire-engine red background with white text and a "photo-realistic" painting by Oxford painter Glennray Tutor of an abandoned gasoline pump. Three more issues were published, including one featuring previously unpublished photographs by Eudora Welty. The magazine then ceased publication in mid-1994 for lack of funding.[citation needed] The magazine has ceased publication several times but is currently published.

Second and third publication

In April 1995, author and Oxford resident John Grisham secured financing to bring the magazine back into publication. The magazine had a new look and was printed on coated paper stock with a higher page count and new advertisers. Although the magazine had a successful following, it was still not a successful business venture and in September 2001 stopped publication for a second time.[citation needed]

The magazine began its third incarnation in late 2002 and was headquartered in Little Rock, Arkansas. The magazine was published in conjunction with the AtHome, Inc., group of magazines. Due to insufficient advertising revenue, it again stopped publication in late 2003.[citation needed]

Present incarnation

After $500,000 in financing was secured, the University of Central Arkansas in Conway, Arkansas, assumed the role as publisher and the magazine began publication once again in December 2004 as a quarterly. The magazine's editorial offices are on the first floor of Main Hall on the university grounds.

In 2008, a business secretary was discovered to have been embezzling money from the magazine since 2007. The secretary, who reported to the magazine's publisher Ray Wittenberg, pled guilty to theft and forgery and was briefly imprisoned and ordered to pay $102,000 in restitution to the magazine.[4]

In the aftermath of the embezzlement, the University of Central Arkansas demoted Wittenberg, loaned the magazine additional funds and assumed control of the business operations of the magazine, instituting the university's spokesman, Warwick Sabin, as publisher.[5]

In February 2009, a "mystery donor" gave the magazine $100,000 to repay the IRS debt incurred as a result of the embezzlement.[6][7]

In July 2012, a few weeks before Issue 78 of the magazine was published, several editorial employees (including a recently fired senior editor and a recently fired intern) made allegations of sexual harassment against founder/editor Marc Smirnoff and managing editor Carol Ann Fitzgerald.[8] Within a week, the two were fired and publisher Warwick Sabin became interim editor.[9][10] Smirnoff and Fitzgerald denied the allegations made against them and said they were not given a chance to defend themselves.[11][12] One reporter concluded that "The Oxford American board didn’t have any clear misbehavioral conduct by Sminoff with which to warrant termination."[13] Smirnoff and Fitzgerald maintain that the allegations against them were the retaliatory actions of disgruntled employees and that they were not given a chance to defend themselves.[14]

In September 2012, when Roger Hodge replaced Warwick Sabin as the magazine's editor, Samir Husni, a journalism professor at the University of Mississippi and a former consultant to the magazine speculated on the uncertain future of the "iconic" magazine without its founder, Smirnoff.[15] In December 2012, the New York Times remarked that Smirnoff had been 'the most important editor out of the South since Willie Morris."[16] Hodge stepped down in 2015.

In October 2012, the Oxford American and the University of Central Arkansas renewed its alliance for five years on the understanding that the magazine will repay its debt, currently at $700,000, to the university. The magazine's chairman of the board, Richard N. Massey, pledged to repay the debt at a rate of about $69,000 a year over about five years.[17] The current editor is Eliza Borné. [18]

The magazine has won two National Magazine Awards and is noted for its annual Southern music issue, which includes a complimentary CD. It has also featured previously unpublished work by William Faulkner.

See also

References

  1. After Summer of Turmoil, Oxford American Appoints Roger Hodge Editor
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  9. Editor Fired Following Harassment Accusation by Julie Bosman. The New York Times. 8 August 2012 [1]
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  18. http://www.oxfordamerican.org/about/masthead

External links