Gangway was an international online literary magazine, bridging Austria and Australia. Its founder and editor in chief is Gerald Ganglbauer, the first issue was launched in June 1996 in Sydney. It appears not to have published since 2016.[1]

Gangway
Logo
International Literary Magazine
EditorGerald Ganglbauer
PublisherGangan Verlag
First issueJune 1996
CountryAustria/Australia
LanguageGerman/English
ISSN1327-7073

Profile

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Published quarterly since 1996 in Vienna, Graz, and Sydney, Gangway appeared as one of the first literary journals on the internet,[2] and has currently over 40 issues online, in both the German and the English language.[3] The magazine has a focus on expatriates showcasing their contemporary writing, poems, short stories, and experimental prose. It also contains book reviews, interviews, and special features.[4] Gangway is digitally archived by DILIMAG (Digitale Literaturmagazine) at the University of Innsbruck, Austria, and by the Australian National Library, Canberra ACT.[5]

After launching Gangway #32 – Gangan Verlag's 20th anniversary issue, at the Literaturhaus Graz in June 2004,[6] Gerald Ganglbauer introduced conceptual changes: Since Gangway appeared as one of the first literary journals on the internet in 1996, many more have come (and some have already gone), therefore I believe that it is imperative to create a defined niche. Hence the general focus of Gangway will be shifted from bilingual Australian and/or Austrian authors to the global community of expat writers living abroad – provided they write in – or are translated into – the English or German language.[7] Since then themed issues were infrequently compiled by guest editors. Reviews, interviews, and special features also continued to appear from time to time. In 2009, Ganglbauer installed Twitter updates, and the original Yahoo! Groups writers' community was replaced by a Facebook fan page.

Authors

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Amongst hundreds of published authors are the Australians Michael Crane, the late Jas H. Duke, Geoffrey Gates, Antigone Kefala, Rudi Krausmann, Ania Walwicz, and from Austria Manfred Chobot, Margret Kreidl, and Erika Kronabitter, to name but a few. Gangway also first published works in translation, e.g. from Australian poet Amanda Stewart, and Austrian poet Ingeborg Bachmann. Some of the contemporary writers recently featured in Gangway No. 40 – Expatriations: The expatriate edition, were: Vahni Capildeo, Ken Edwards, Laurie Duggan, Louis Armand, and David Miller. A complete list of all Gangway authors is maintained online.[8]

Editors

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Contributing editors

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  • Petra Ganglbauer (Vienna). Reviews editor since 2000.
  • Andrea Bandhauer (Sydney). Co-editor from 1998 to 2000.
  • Lisa Fischnaller (Linz). Contributing editor from 1999 to 2003.
  • Mike Markart (Styria). Contributing editor from 1999 to 2003.
  • Clare Moss (Sydney). Co-editor in 2001.

Guest editors

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  • Shane Jesse Christmass (Newcastle). Guest editor in 2002.
  • Hop Dac (Newcastle). Guest editor in 2002.
  • Cyril Wong (Singapore). Guest editor in 2005.
  • Tatjana Lukić (born 1959; died 2008 in Canberra). Guest editor in 2005/2006.
  • Gabriele Pötscher (Graz). Guest editor in 2007.
  • Walter Hölbling (Graz). Guest editor in 2007.
  • Andrea Ghoneim-Rosenauer (Vienna/Cairo). Guest editor in 2008.
  • Michael Haeflinger (Berlin). Guest editor in 2009.
  • Helen Lambert (Sydney/Dublin). Guest editor in 2010.
  • Andrew Madigan (Al Ain, UAE). Guest editor in 2011.
  • Karin Seidner-Macke (Vienna). Guest editor in 2012.
  • Bev Braune (Sydney). Guest editor in 2014.

References

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  1. ^ "Gangway : the on-line lit mag". Trove. Retrieved 16 September 2023.
  2. ^ Member of ILEF – The Internet Literary Editors Fellowship. Website of ILEF. Retrieved 8 February 2011.
  3. ^ Listing of European cultural magazines and e-zines Archived 27 December 2014 at the Wayback Machine. Website of Eurozine. Retrieved 8 February 2011.
  4. ^ Duotrope Editor Interview for gangway. Website of Duotrope. Retrieved 8 February 2011.
  5. ^ Gangway at Pandora Archive. Website of the National Library of Australia. Retrieved 8 February 2011.
  6. ^ Andrea Ghoneim-Rosenauer: Literarische Publikationsformen im WWW (Dissertation about Gangway, includes an interview with Gerald Ganglbauer), Vienna 2008.
  7. ^ Editorial Archived 1 July 2011 at the Wayback Machine. Website of Gangway. Retrieved 8 February 2011.
  8. ^ Authors sorted by issue – and in alphabetical order Archived 1 July 2011 at the Wayback Machine. Website of Gangway. Retrieved 21 February 2011.
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