a mixture of jewelry

Welcome to our 2024 Issue Part One!
The Teenage Years

     Featured (Re) Contributors 

TEXT

Poetry: Caits Meissner. Robert Gibbons. Tony Howarth. Sean Singer. Amirah Al Wassif. Sun Yung Shin. Flash Fiction: Paul Hostovsky. Eliot Ku. Annelies Mohle. Short story excerpt: Jennifer Baker. Flash Creative Non-Fiction: Lea Page. Paula Colangelo. Ujjwala Kaushik. 

The Multi-Genre Science Corner.

ART
Irina Tall
Gina Randazzo

MUSIC
Songs in the Key of Teens

the scrabble letters R and E

Welcome to (Re)!

I am very excited to present a “journal of ideas” that is a meeting place of visual art, prose, science, and more.

The idea for this endeavor came about from my love of vintage clothing and found objects and the way in which one ‘re’cycles these objects, et al. to make them their own. This concept then grew from that which we acquire in this vein, to that which we create through our various art forms (and yes, science and math are considered here, to be ‘the application of creative skill and imagination,’ as art is formally defined). All of the material presented incorporates a re-root word, such as relive, reinvent, reuse…into its framework in whatever way the artist chooses. And so, (Re) is a product of this expanded idea.

The journal, now available bi-annually online, features the work of artists/creators/thinkers in various categories and I am honored to present their work within this forum.

Thank you so much for taking the time to explore this ever- evolving (re)source.

I hope you enjoy the ride!

— Felice Neals
Writer, reader, photographer, dance devotee, film citizen, language-a-phile… 

 

TEXT

Welcome to our Spring-back-after-Fall-and-Winter-hibernation issue! Our theme  for this season of blossoms and (re)newal: The Teenage Years

In our TEXT section, we (re)joice at the opportunity to present poetry, fiction and creative non-fiction by our wonderful cast of authors. And as always, we share the happenings within and beyond our universe in the Multi-Genre Science Corner.

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Souvenirs from the teenage years:

 

In our community in Chatanooga, Tennessee in the mid-to-late 1950s, we had social clubs. One for the girls; the Dutchesses and one for the boys; the Dukes. We would meet at our houses and talk about things like school, what we wanted to achieve in the future. And as we were African-American and it was the segregated south – someone might share if they were confronted by anyone in their daily travels. We knew where you could go for a meal, for example, and where you couldn’t. It was just the way things were at that time. 

Our Dukes and Dutchess dances were held at local venues such as the YMCA and the Deployers Club. We would dance – maybe it was the twist? – to music by James Brown and more.  — J.P., Los Angeles, CA.

 

 

POETRY

Adulting

Caits Meissner

Do your words hang on air?

Robert Gibbons

Adjusting to Girls in the Schoolroom

Tony Howarth

Teenager

Sean Singer

Prayers from Our House Roof

Amirah Al Wassif

The Devil's Walk: A Ballad

신 선 영 Sun Yung Shin

FLASH FICTION

Youth & Beauty

Paul Hostovsky

Love Poems I Wrote When I was 18

Eliot Ku

Edge of Innocence

Annelies Mohle

SHORT STORY EXCERPT

Lola

Jennifer Baker

CREATIVE NON-FICTION

Oasis

Lea Page

Turnabout

Paula Colangelo

Fragile Future

Ujjwala Kaushik

THE MULTI-GENRE SCIENCE CORNER

“Science is the poetry of reality.” — Carl Sagan

The famous scientist’s teenage yearbook.

photo of neil de grasse tyson

Excerpt from an Interview with Neil DeGrasse Tyson for Business Insider:

At the time deGrasse Tyson was just a 17-year-old kid from the Bronx with dreams of being a scientist, but [Carl]Sagan had invited him to spend a Saturday with him in Ithaca at Cornell University, after seeing his application to attend University there.

“At the end of the day, he drove me back to the bus station. The snow was falling harder. He wrote his phone number, his home phone number, on a scrap of paper. And he said, ‘If the bus can’t get through, call me. Spend the night at my home, with my family.’

I already knew I wanted to become a scientist, but that afternoon I learned from Carl the kind of person I wanted to become. He reached out to me and to countless others. Inspiring so many of us to study, teach, and do science. Science is a cooperative enterprise, spanning the generations.”

By the age of twelve Albert Einstein had taught himself geometry. At the age of sixteen he failed an exam in order to qualify to train as an electrical engineer. He remained in school and developed a new plan for his future. Einstein decided to study math and physics so he could become a teacher. — nasa.gov

ART

The ART section of this season’s issue highlights (re)calibrated images through the unique artform of collage as created by Irina Tall.

Gina Randazzo graces our pages with dynamic photography that captures the world of a young protester as she courageously takes a stand on climate change and its detrimental effect on the environment.

IRINA TALL 

This is her first ball and she will be a princess

Collage, paper. 40×30 cm. 2023

You may grow wings…

Collage, paper. 40×30 cm. 2023

Three faces. Dreams

Ink, gel pen, thread, colored paper. 40×3 cm. 2024

Irina Tall (Novikova) is an artist, graphic artist, and illustrator, and author. A graduate of the State Academy of Slavic Cultures, Irina’s first solo exhibition was at Maksim Bahdanovič Museum in Balarus. Her works often raise themes of ecology; in 2005 she devoted a series of works to the Chernobyl disaster, drawing on anti-war topics. In 2020, she took part in Poznań Art Week. Her work has been published in Gupsophila, Harpy Hybrid Review, Little Literary Living Room, among others. Irina was included 2022’s The 50 Best Short Stories, (published by Vine Leaves Press, 2022) and The Wonders of Winter: A Poetic Anthology (South Arizona Press, 2022).
https://www.instagram.com/irina.tall111?igsh=YWYwM2I1ZDdmOQ=

GINA RANDAZZO

Avery Tsai is a climate activist with Extinction Rebellion NYC. She is 14 years old.

Avery joins climate protesters blocking traffic on Park Avenue outside JP Morgan Chase Headquarters at an Occupy Park Ave. demonstration marking the tenth anniversary of Hurricane Sandy. Protesters target the bank for its funding of fossil fuels and call on Governor Hochul to tax the rich for green housing for all in NYC.
10/28/22
Avery holds her sign at the March To End Fossil Fuels where she joined more than 70,000 people led by Indigenous communities in a march through midtown Manhattan to the United Nations calling for President Biden to stop investing in fossil fuels. The march preceded the opening of the UN Climate Ambition Summit.
9/17/23
Avery and her mom, Elizabeth Payne, participate in a die-in on the steps of the Metropolitan Museum Of Art. Climate activists with Extinction Rebellion held a silent protest inside the Met and then a die-in on the steps of the museum’s entrance on Fifth Ave. The demonstration at the museum is part of a campaign to Free The Degas Two, Joanna Smith and Tim Martin, climate activists indicted on charges of conspiracy for an act of civil disobedience near Degas’ Tiny Dancer sculpture at the National Gallery on April 27, 2023.
7/8/23

Gina Randazzo born in New York City, earned a BFA from New York University, Tisch School of the Arts where she studied filmmaking and photography. Gina’s work as a visual storyteller concentrates on social justice. Published editorial work may be seen in media outlets including The Guardian, The New York Times, Mother Jones and The Wall Street Journal. Her photography has been exhibited at galleries and museums across the United States including The International Center of Photography (ICP), A.I.R. Gallery, Pen + Brush, Samuel Dorsky Museum Of Art, and Houston Center For Photography. A member of the Directors Guild of America, Gina is an Assistant Director with film and television production credits that include six seasons of Law & Order, Eight Men Out (dir. John Sayles) and Cadillac Man (dir. Roger Donaldson).

MUSIC

What better way to celebrate the teenage years and those that fall beyond the bounds of adolescence than with music on the top of the pop charts.

Thanks to Sky Music for this playlist.

https://youtu.be/fXt7l3veIqA?si=lsHp7uxiRHutC3Dw

 

OTHER STUFF

Here is where I would like to express my deepest gratitude to the (Re) contributors, the friends and family who support this adventure with their encouragement and guidance, Lori and Jim, the web consultants who gave me the tools to create this site and continue to provide their valued assistance, and the wonderful readers, who have followed us from the beginning to our recent move from quarterly to bi-annual content. Thank you! Merci! Gracias! Shukriya! Grazie! Obrigado! Xiexie! Amsegenallo! Asante! Shukraan!

COVER photograph by Felice Neals: Ode to buried treasure: Teenage Trinket Montage.  2024.

TEXT: Photos by Felice Neals. Poetry and Flash Fiction: Graffiti from around the world. 2022/23. Short Story: Vanity Still Life, 2024. Creative Non-Fiction: We Don’t Play With Legos Anymore, Nashville, TN. 2022.

The Science Corner: Photographers Unknown.

ART: Photos taken by the artists.

THANK YOU, as always, to our Editor H.E. Fisher, for her sharp eye and invaluable contribution. I could not have gotten this project off and running without her support and editorial expertise.

***

Feel free to contact us and please join our mailing list by using the form below! You can also follow us on Instagram: @reideasjournal and Twitter: #reideasjournal Email: info@reideasjournal.com

the scrabble letters R and E

SUBMISSIONS GUIDELINES

Hello!

We are currently closed for submissions. 

Please check back again in October, 2024 for our next open call.

Thank you!