Nat. Brut

Nat. Brut is an American biannual[1] literary magazine founded in 2012 by Anna Ploegh and Andrew Ridker [2]. The magazine contains artwork, non-fiction and fiction literature, and poetry by a set of diverse artists and is publicized both online and in print.

Nat. Brut Issue Five Cover

History

As of 2014, the magazine's current editor-in-chief is a self identified queer Latina by the name of Kayla E. who in addition to her role in Nat. Brut, is a Harvard graduate, designer, artist, and public speaker.[3] Kayla E.'s work has been published in Ecotone magazine, Latina magazine, and on Nat. Brut. When Kayla E. took over as editor-in-chief of Nat. Brut in 2014 she said that "Because of my background (I’m queer, half-Mexican, and come from a working-class background), I can’t help but project my own desires on what a publication should look like and aim for. When I took over... I completely transformed what Nat Brut should look like and [the] types of voices it should highlight".[4]

Issue 1 of Nat. Brut was published on September 2012. The magazine featured Kayla E.'s Work Time as the cover art. There was also poetry by D. A. Powell and the film Document (2012) by Bill Brown (filmmaker), among other contributors.[5] In January 2013, issue 2 was released followed by issue 3 in April 2013. In between August and September 2013, Nat. Brut released issue 3.5. The issue was a farewell issue by the original editors, who explained that the magazine would produce publications biannually instead of quarterly in an attempt to provide higher quality issues. [6]

Nat. Brut's mission statement is to advance inclusivity in all creative fields by providing an interdisciplinary safe space for marginalized artists. [7]

Nat. Brut is a nonprofit publication sponsored in part by Fractured Atlas.[8]

Publication

Nat. Brut offers its content both online and in print,[9] after a successful Kickstarter project to print the magazine in 2014. The fundraising drive was a Kickstarter staff pick.[10]

Nat. Brut publishes twice a year, and contains fiction, poetry, nonfiction, interviews and art, with previous issues including a comics section as supplementary material.[11]

The magazine aims to produce intersectionally feminist content and to welcome a broad range of writers, including those with disabilities.[12] Nat. Brut publishes multimedia content, including art.[13] The magazine also runs a blog with more frequent and shorter content on the platform Tumblr.[14][15]

Part of the magazine's goal is to change the public's perception of literature. Kayla E. told Time Magazine that “Audiences who mainly consume the white, male narratives that dominate these arts seem to have difficulty empathizing with writers and characters whose narratives are different. Focusing on voices and stories that are traditionally pushed to the margins or completely left out of mainstream art and literary culture allows us to address this empathic disparity.”[16]

Its Fall 2015 issue included an interview with artist Jayson Musson.[17]

In 2014 and 2015, Nat. Brut ran a flash fiction contest, judged by Kathleen Hale[18] and Amy Hempel,[19] respectively.

Name

Associate editor Tyler Richard stated in an interview with the Harvard Advocate that the magazine's name is "a piece of purposeful nonsense"[20] that nonetheless echoes the Art Brut movement.

References

  1. "Poets and Writers". Poets & Writers Magazine.
  2. https://theestablishment.co/illustrator-kayla-e-knows-gender-is-hard-1197bb08ce96. Retrieved Nov 28, 2017. Missing or empty |title= (help)
  3. Kayla-e https://www.kaylaework.com/. Retrieved Nov 28, 2017. Missing or empty |title= (help)
  4. "Feministing".
  5. "Nat. Brut Archives, Issue 1".
  6. "Nat. Brut Archive, Issue 3.5".
  7. "ABOUT". Nat. Brut.
  8. "Fractured Atlas". Fractured Atlas Project Page. Retrieved February 22, 2016.
  9. "Kickstarter". Kickstarter. Retrieved February 22, 2016.
  10. Kickstarter https://www.kickstarter.com/projects/natbrut/nat-brut-in-print. Retrieved February 22, 2016. Missing or empty |title= (help)
  11. Megan Milks Blog. Wordpress https://meganmilks.wordpress.com/tag/nat-brut/. Retrieved February 22, 2016. Missing or empty |title= (help)
  12. Duotrope https://duotrope.com/listing/12925. Missing or empty |title= (help)
  13. "The New Magazine Every Socially Aware Person Needs to Read". Huffington Post. Retrieved February 22, 2016.
  14. Nat. Brut Tumblr [natbrut.tumblr.com natbrut.tumblr.com] Check |url= value (help). Retrieved February 22, 2016. Missing or empty |title= (help)
  15. "The New Magazine Every Socially Aware Person Needs to Read". Huffington Post. Retrieved February 22, 2016.
  16. "Today's Nobel Prize in Literature is a Win for Humanity". TIME Magazine. Retrieved June 9, 2016.
  17. Nat. Brut http://www.natbrut.com/interview-jayson-musson-bum-in-suit-mistaken-for-important-man.html. Retrieved Feb 22, 2016. Missing or empty |title= (help)
  18. Writer Mag. Writer Mag http://www.writermag.com/contests/nat-brut-flash-fiction-contest/. Retrieved February 22, 2016. Missing or empty |title= (help)
  19. "Writer Mag".
  20. The Harvard Advocate Blog. The Harvard Advocate https://theadvocateblog.net/2015/03/26/a-conversation-with-the-editors-of-nat-brut/. Retrieved Feb 22, 2016. Missing or empty |title= (help)
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