Writings in the United Amateur, 1915-1922 Part 1
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Writings in the United Amateur, 1915-1922.
by Howard Phillips Lovecraft.
THE UNITED AMATEUR
SEPTEMBER 1915
[Ill.u.s.tration: HOWARD P. LOVECRAFT First Vice-President U. A. P. A.]
United Amateur Press a.s.sociation
EXPONENT OF AMATEUR JOURNALISM
ITS OBJECT
The desire to write for publication is one which inheres strongly in every human breast. From the proficient college graduate, storming the gates of the high-grade literary magazines, to the raw schoolboy, vainly endeavoring to place his first crude compositions in the local newspapers, the whole intelligent public are today seeking expression through the printed page, and yearning to behold their thoughts and ideals permanently crystallized in the magic medium of type. But while a few persons of exceptional talent manage eventually to gain a foothold in the professional world of letters rising to celebrity through the wide diffusion of their art, ideals, or opinions; the vast majority, unless aided in their education by certain especial advantages, are doomed to confine their expression to the necessarily restricted sphere of ordinary conversation. To supply these especial educational advantages which may enable the general public to achieve the distinction of print, and which may prevent the talented but unknown author from remaining forever in obscurity, has arisen that largest and foremost of societies for literary education =The United Amateur Press a.s.sociation=.
ITS ORIGIN
Amateur journalism, or the composition and circulation of small, privately printed magazines, is an instructive diversion which has existed in the United States for over half a century. In the decade of 1866-1876 this practice first became an organized inst.i.tution; a short-lived society of amateur journalists, including the now famous publisher, Charles Scribner, having existed from 1869 to 1874. In 1876 a more lasting society was formed, which exists to this day as an exponent of light dilettantism. Not until 1895, however, was amateur journalism established as a serious branch of educational endeavour. On September 2nd of that year, Mr. William H. Greenfield, a gifted professional author, of Philadelphia, founded =The United Amateur Press a.s.sociation=, which has grown to be the leader of its kind, and the representative of amateur journalism in its best phases throughout the English-speaking world.
ITS NATURE
In many respects the word "amateur" fails to do full credit to amateur journalism and the a.s.sociation which best represents it. To some minds the term conveys an idea of crudity and immaturity, yet the =United= can boast of members and publications whose polish and scholars.h.i.+p are well-nigh impeccable. In considering the adjective "amateur" as applied to the press a.s.sociation, we must adhere to the more basic interpretation, regarding the word as indicating the non-mercenary nature of the members.h.i.+p. Our amateurs write purely for love of their art, without the stultifying influence of commercialism. Many of them are prominent professional authors in the outside world, but their professionalism never creeps into their a.s.sociation work. The atmosphere is wholly fraternal, and courtesy takes the place of currency.
The real essential of amateur journalism and =The United Amateur Press a.s.sociation= is the amateur paper or magazine, which somewhat resembles the average high-school or college publication. These journals, varying greatly in size and character, are issued by various members at their own expense, and contain, besides the literary work of their several editors or publishers, contributions from all the many members who do not publish papers of their own. Their columns are open to every person in the a.s.sociation, and it may be said with justice that no one will find it impossible to secure the publication of any literary composition of reasonable brevity. The papers thus published are sent free to all our many members, who const.i.tute a select and highly appreciative reading public. Since each member receives the published work of every other member, many active and brilliant minds are brought into close contact, and questions of every sort, literary, historical, and scientific, are debated both in the press and in personal correspondence. The correspondence of members is one of the most valuable features of the =United=, for through this medium a great intellectual stimulus, friendly and informal in nature, is afforded.
Congenial members are in this way brought together in a lettered companions.h.i.+p, which often grows into life-long friends.h.i.+p, while persons of opposed ideas may mutually gain much breadth of mind by hearing the other side of their respective opinions discussed in a genial manner. In short, the =United= offers an exceptionally well-proportioned mixture of instruction and fraternal cheer. There are no limits of age, s.e.x, education, position, or locality in this most complete of democracies. Boys and girls of twelve and men and women of sixty, parents and their sons and daughters, college professors and grammar-school pupils, aristocrats and intelligent labourers, Easterners and Westerners, are here given equal advantages, those of greater education helping their cruder brethren until the common fund of culture is as nearly level as it can be in any human organization. Members are cla.s.sified according to age; "A" meaning under sixteen, "B" from 16 to 21, and "C" over 21. The advantages offered to those of limited acquirements are immense, many persons having gained practically all their literary polish through members.h.i.+p in the =United=. A much cherished goal is professional authors.h.i.+p or editors.h.i.+p, and numerous indeed are the =United= members who have now become recognized authors, poets, editors, and publishers. True, though trite, is the saying that amateur journalism is an actual training school for professional journalism.
ITS PUBLIs.h.i.+NG ACTIVITIES
Members of the =United= may or may not publish little papers of their own. This is a matter of choice, for there are always enough journals to print the work of the non-publis.h.i.+ng members. Youths who possess printing presses will find publis.h.i.+ng an immense but inexpensive pleasure, whilst other publishers may have their printing done at very reasonable rates by those who do own presses. The favorite size for amateur papers is 57 inches, which can be printed at 55 or 60 cents per page, each page containing about 250 words. Thus a four-page issue containing 1000 words can be published for less than $2.50, if arrangements are made, as is often the case, for its free mailing with any other paper. Certain of the more pretentious journals affect the 710 size, which costs about $1.60 for each page of 700 words. These figures allow for 250 copies, the most usual number to be mailed. Mr.
E. E. Ericson of Elroy, Wisconsin, is our Official Printer, and his work is all that the most fastidious could demand. Other printers may be found amongst the young men who print their own papers. In many cases they can quote very satisfactory prices. Two or more members may issue a paper co-operatively, the individual expense then being very slight.
ITS CONTRIBUTED LITERATURE
The =United= welcomes all literary contributions; poems, stories, and essays, which the various members may submit. However, contribution is by no means compulsory, and in case a member finds himself too busy for activity, he may merely enjoy the free papers which reach him, without taxing himself with literary labour. For those anxious to contribute, every facility is provided. In some cases negotiations are made directly between publisher and contributor, but the majority are accommodated by the two Ma.n.u.script Bureaus, Eastern and Western, which receive contributions in any quant.i.ty from the non-publis.h.i.+ng members, and are drawn upon for material by those who issue papers. These bureaus practically guarantee on the one hand to find a place for each member's ma.n.u.script, and on the other hand to keep each publisher well supplied with matter for his journal.
ITS CRITICAL DEPARTMENTS
The two critical departments of the =United= are at present the most substantial of its various educational advantages. The Department of Private Criticism is composed exclusively of highly cultured members, usually professors or teachers of English, who practically mould the taste of the whole a.s.sociation, receiving and revising before publication the work of all who choose to submit it to them. The service furnished free by this department is in every way equal to that for which professional critical bureaus charge about two dollars.
Ma.n.u.scripts are carefully corrected and criticised in every detail, and authors are given comprehensive advice designed to elevate their taste, style, and grammar. Many a crude but naturally gifted writer has been developed to polished fluency and set on the road to professional authors.h.i.+p through the =United's= Department of Private Criticism.
The Department of Public Criticism reviews thoroughly and impartially the various printed papers and their contents, offering precepts and suggestions for improvement. Its reports are printed in the official organ of the a.s.sociation, and serve as a record of our literary achievement.
ITS LITERARY AWARDS
To encourage excellence amongst the members of the =United=, annual honours or "laureates.h.i.+ps" are awarded the authors of the best poems, stories, essays, or editorials. Partic.i.p.ation in these compet.i.tions is not compulsory, since they apply only to pieces which have been especially "entered for laureates.h.i.+p." The entries are judged not by the members of the a.s.sociation, but by highly distinguished litterateurs of the professional world, selected particularly for the occasion. Our latest innovation is a laureates.h.i.+p for the best home-printed paper, which will excite keen rivalry among our younger members, and bring out some careful specimens of the typographical art. Besides the laureates.h.i.+ps there are other honours and prizes awarded by individual publishers within the =United=, many of the amateur journals offering excellent books for the best stories, reviews, or reports submitted to them.
ITS OFFICIAL ORGAN
The a.s.sociation, as a whole, publishes a voluminous 710 monthly magazine called =The United Amateur=, which serves as the official organ. In this magazine may be found the complete revised list of members, the reports of officers and committees, the ample reviews issued by the Department of Public Criticism, a selection of the best contemporary amateur literature, together with the latest news of amateur journalists and their local clubs from all over the Anglo-Saxon world. =The United Amateur= is published by an annually elected Official Editor, and printed by the Official Publisher. It is sent free to all members of the a.s.sociation.
ITS GOVERNMENT
=The United Amateur Press a.s.sociation= is governed by a board of officers elected by popular vote. The elections take place at the annual conventions, where amateurs from all sections meet and fraternize. Those who attend vote in person, whilst all others send in proxy ballots.
There is much friendly rivalry between cities concerning the selection of the convention seat each year. The princ.i.p.al elective officers of the =United= are the President, two Vice-Presidents, the Treasurer, the Official Editor and the three members of the Board of Directors. There are also a Historian, a Laureate Recorder, and two Ma.n.u.script Managers.
Appointed by the President are the members of the two Departments of Criticism, the Supervisor of Amendments, the Official Publisher, and the Secretary of the a.s.sociation. All save Secretary and Official Publisher, serve without remuneration. The basic law of the =United= comprises an excellent Const.i.tution and By-Laws.
ITS LOCAL CLUBS
The =United= encourages the formation of local literary or press clubs in cities or towns containing several members. These clubs generally publish papers, and hold meetings wherein the pleasures of literature are enlivened by those of the society. The most desirable form of club activity is that in which a high-school instructor forms a literary society of the more enthusiastic members of his cla.s.s.
ITS PLACE IN EDUCATION
During the past two years, as it has approached and pa.s.sed its twentieth birthday, the =United= has been endeavoring more strongly than ever to find and occupy its true place amongst the many and varied phases of education. That it discharges an unique function in literary culture is certain, and its members have of late been trying very actively to establish and define its relation to the high-school and the university.
Mr. Maurice Winter Moe, Instructor of English at the Appleton High School, Appleton, Wisconsin, and one of our very ablest members, took the first decisive step by organizing his pupils into an amateur press club, using the =United= to supplement his regular cla.s.s-room work. The scholars were delighted, and many have acquired a love of good literature which will never leave them. Three or four, in particular, have become prominent in the affairs of the =United=. After demonstrating the success of his innovation, Mr. Moe described it in =The English Journal=, his article arousing much interest in educational circles, and being widely reprinted by other papers. In November, 1914, Mr. Moe addressed an a.s.semblage of English teachers in Chicago, and there created so much enthusiasm for the =United=, that scores of instructors have subsequently joined our ranks, many of them forming school clubs on the model of the original club at Appleton. Here, then, is one definite destiny for our a.s.sociation: to a.s.sist the teaching of advanced English in the high-school. We are especially eager for high-school material, teachers and pupils alike.
But there still remain a numerous cla.s.s, who, though not connected with school or college, have none the less sincere literary aspirations. At present they are benefited immensely through mental contact with our more polished members, yet for the future we plan still greater aids for their development, by the creation of a systematic "Department of Instruction," which will, if successfully established, amount practically to a free correspondence school, and an "Authors' Placing Bureau," which will help amateurs in entering the professional field.
Our prime endeavor is at present to secure members of high mental and scholastic quality, in order that the =United= may be strengthened for its increasing responsibility. Professors, teachers, clergymen, and authors have already responded in gratifying numbers to our wholly altruistic plea for their presence among us. The reason for the =United's= success as an educational factor seems to lie princ.i.p.ally in the splendid loyalty and enthusiasm which all the members somehow acquire upon joining. Every individual is alert for the welfare of the a.s.sociation, and its activities form the subject of many of the current essays and editorials. The ceaseless writing in which most of the members indulge is in itself an aid to fluency, while the mutual examples and criticisms help on still further the pleasantly unconscious acquisition of a good literary style. When regular courses of instruction shall have been superimposed upon these things, the a.s.sociation can indeed afford to claim a place of honour in the world of education.
ITS ENTRANCE CONDITIONS
The only requirement for admission to the =United= is earnest literary aspiration. Any member will furnish the candidate for admission with an application blank, signed in recommendation. This application, filled out and forwarded to the Secretary of the a.s.sociation with the sum of fifty cents as dues for the first year, and accompanied by a "credential," or sample of the candidate's original literary work, will be acted upon with due consideration by the proper official. No candidate of real sincerity will be denied admittance, and the applicant will generally be soon rewarded by his certificate of members.h.i.+p, signed by the President and Secretary. Papers, letters, and postal cards of welcome will almost immediately pour in upon him, and he will in due time behold his credential in print. (Unless it be something already printed.) Once a member, his dues will be one dollar yearly, and if he should ever leave the =United=, later desiring to join again, his reinstatement fee will be one dollar.
ITS REPRESENTATIVES
=The United Amateur Press a.s.sociation= is anything but local in its personnel. Its active American members.h.i.+p extends from Boston to Los Angeles, and from Milwaukee to Tampa, thus bringing all sections in contact, and representing every phase of American thought. Its English members.h.i.+p extends as far north as Newcastle-on-Tyne. Typical papers are published in England, California, Kansas, Wisconsin, Ohio, Illinois, Alabama, Mississippi, North Carolina, District of Columbia, New York, and Rhode Island.
In writing for entrance blanks or for further information concerning the =United=, the applicant may address any one of the following officers, who will gladly give details, and samples of amateur papers: Leo Fritter, President, 503 Central National Bank Bldg., Columbus, Ohio; H. P. Lovecraft, Vice-President, 598 Angell St., Providence, R. I.; Mrs.
J. W. Renshaw, Second Vice-President, Coffeeville, Miss.; William J.
Dowdell, Secretary, 2428 East 66th St., Cleveland, Ohio; or Edward F.
Daas, Official Editor, 1717 Cherry St., Milwaukee, Wis. Professional authors interested in our work are recommended to communicate with the Second Vice-President, while English teachers may derive expert information from Maurice W. Moe, 658 Atlantic St., Appleton, Wis. Youths who possess printing-presses are referred to the Secretary, who is himself a young typographer.
Writings in the United Amateur, 1915-1922 Part 1
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