Monday, November 27, 2006

Will You Donate to Perigee?

It is an exciting day for all of us here at Perigee, and we want to share some good news with you. After months of paperwork and anxious anticipation, the U.S. Internal Revenue Service has granted Perigee 501(c)(3), Non-Profit, status under section 170 of the IRS code.

What makes this such good news?

First, donations to Perigee are now tax-deductible! Because of this we have created a brand-new donor program. The program includes eight different donor levels, each with its own unique benefits—including free Perigee merchandise, discounted contest fees, and much more. All starting at only $10!

Second, our Non-Profit status qualifies us for a bevy of grants aimed at promoting the arts and advancing small publishers. With luck, this future grant money will go a long way toward not only moving Perigee from the Internet to the printed page, but also expanding our readership and enhancing our content.

How can you help? Please consider donating to Perigee today. Your money will immediately be applied to our Non-Profit purposes, and when tax time rolls around you can deduct your donation. Choose from one of our six regular donor levels, or maximize your tax benefits by making an extraordinary donation and joining either our "Contributor's Circle" or "Publisher's Circle."

Your donations are critical. Consider making one today—even a small donation can make a big difference. Visit our current issue and click on "Donate," or simply click here to review the donation options.

Wednesday, November 22, 2006

501(c)(3), Non-Profit Status

The IRS has granted Perigee 501(c)(3), non-profit status. It is an exciting day for all of us here at Perigee, and we hope you will join us as we toast those who've made Perigee possible—and those who've made the journey exciting—with good writing, good commentary, and good input. Thanks to all.

We also hope you will consider donating to Perigee. Donations are now tax-deductible, and they will go a long way toward spreading and promoting the arts—and providing a free venue for talented writers and artists the world over.

Click Here to donate today! You can choose from eight donor programs—each with their own set of benefits.

Cheers!

Monday, November 20, 2006

Pushcart Nominees Submitted

Perigee has submitted our 2006 Pushcart Nominees to the Pushcart panel. We wish them the best of luck and thank them again for the excellent work!

Brian Spears, "Buffalo River, 2002"
Jason Lee Huskey, "Butterface"
Lawrence Lawson, "Mirrors Finding Floors"
Eileen Malone, "Her Ride"
Gwendolyn Cash, "Choosing Berries and Onions"
Lisa Galloway, "She Was a Chagall"

Friday, November 10, 2006

IRS Approval

We are excited to report that our application analyst at the Internal Revenue Service has recommended us for approval as a non-profit 501(c)(3) organization. We are very excited about this. After months of work, application fees, and patient waiting, we are about to become a 501(c)(3).

Thanks to everyone who continues to support us—our readers and those who submit work. The future holds big things for all of us.

Monday, November 06, 2006

Lennon, Stevens, and the Power of Imagination

ON THE EVE OF ELECTION DAY,
JOHN LENNON AND WALLACE STEVENS:
THE POWER OF THE IMAGINATION TO HEAL

Fortunately, I think most of the world knows, by heart, the lyrics of John Lennon's song Imagine. According to Wikipedia, this utopian song is widely considered as one of the greatest songs of all time. In an interview for Playboy in 1980, Lennon had this to say about the song:

It's not a new message: "Give Peace a Chance"—we're not being unreasonable, just saying, "Give it a chance." With "Imagine," we're saying, "Can you imagine a world without countries or religions?" It's the same message over and over. And it's positive.

Nutopia is a conceptual country created by John Lennon and Yoko Ono on April's Fool's Day in 1973. This country (or nation) was supposed to live up to the standards set by the song Imagine. Nutopia has no land, no boundaries, no passports, only people. Nutopia has no laws other than cosmic. All people of Nutopia are ambassadors of the country. Citizenship of the country can be obtained by declaration of your awareness of Nutopia. The flag of Nutopia has only one colour: white. The seal of Nutopia is a picture of the marine animal called a seal.

According to Wallace Stevens, this kind of process of the imagination has the ability to heal the world. In his book The Necessary Angel: Essays on Reality and the Imagination, Stevens wrote an essay titled the "Imagination as Value." The focus of this essay is to evaluate the value of the imagination to other facets of our life beyond the arts and letters. He starts out the essay with a counter argument from Blaise Pascal, a philosopher of the fifteenth century, who calls "the imagination the mistress of the world." Stevens counters Pascal's original statement by asserting that when Pascal was dying, it was the imagination that could dispose the pain and "create beauty, justice, and happiness". Thus, Pascal's idea eventually leads to this declaration by Stevens:

The imagination is the power of the mind over the possibilities of things: but if this constitutes a certain single characteristic, it is the source not of a certain single value but of as many values as reside in the possibility of things.

Obviously, this is huge; the value of the imagination is endless: "works of art ... sculptures of Michelangelo ... architecture ... decorations of churches ... Jesuit church at Lucerne" and so forth. Yet, according to Stevens, the value of the imagination is more complicated when it comes to metaphysics. In the view of the logical positivists, Professor Ayer's book Language, Truth, and Logic professes that the imagination has value as a "means of moral inspiration." Then, Stevens presents Professor Joad's idea that reality (and the imagination) should "transcend the world of sense-experience."

Using Freud as a possibility to support his argument, Stevens purposes the idea that the imagination can be included in a "science of illusions" whereby all possibilities are derived from the mind: "If we live in the mind, we live with the imagination." From Steven's application of the imagination to the poetry of the Bible, he reaches this important understanding:

We cannot look at the past or the future except by means of the imagination but again the imagination of backward glances is one thing and the imagination of looks ahead something else. Even the psychologist concede this present particular, for, with them, memory involves a reproductive power, and looks ahead involve a creative power: the power of expectations.

Therefore, when dealing with the arts and letters, the above understanding is rooted in the idea that the imagination affords us the ability to know "the truth as we see it," and what is important in metaphysics "is the truth as it is." Yet Stevens furthers his argument of the good of the imagination in metaphysics when he compares the function of the imagination in the works of art to the life of Professor Santayana whose teachings stress sensation over rigor ("To feel beauty is a better thing than to understand how we come to feel it"), which leads Stevens to the belief that the imagination is "an intrinsic value." Finally, Stevens makes two important points:

If the imagination is the faculty by which we import the unreal into what is real, its value is the value of the way of thinking by which we project the idea of God into the idea of man. It creates images that are dependent of their originals since nothing is more certain than that the imagination is agreeable to the imagination.

Thus, in the realm of spirituality and faith, the imagination is a necessity. Furthermore, in our endeavors to follow a humane universal approach to the world, Stevens declares that the imagination is essential:

My final point, then, is that the imagination is the power that enables us to perceive the normal in the abnormal, the opposite of chaos in chaos.

Therefore, Stevens concludes that the value of the imagination reaches far beyond our own logic and analysis to a place where the "the service of love and imagination" can heal "those that live in misery and terror."

So what do you say? Let's join John Lennon and become "dreamers" as we "imagine all the people living life in peace," and perhaps, according to the healing powers Wallace Stevens believes the imagination holds, "the world will be as one."


(Jensea Storie, Poetry Editor)

Sunday, November 05, 2006

Please Vote

To our United States audience:

Whatever your views or political persuasion, please vote during this mid-term election. The stakes are high, and America needs your electoral voice to be heard!

For help in finding your local polling place, you can visit vote411.org or mypollingplace.com

V O T E!  V O T E!  V O T E!  V O T E!  V O T E!