Annual Tanka Contest 2014
Welcome to yet another round at the Annual Tanka Contest here at Mandy’s Pages. It is a pleasure to organize this contest for you in the spirit of tanka. Last year we had an overwhelming response of approximately 50 submissions and it had been an exciting contest not only for contestants but also for the judges and the organizing team. David Terelinck, Brian Zimmer and Kathabela Wilson did us proud by supporting the contest and judging the entries.
This year too, without fail, we have some of the finest tanka poets who have obliged to preside over the Annual Tanka Contest as judges. They have a mix of editorial skills, old school tanka influence and a dash of modern contemporary outlook. In addition, quite a few poets, authors and well-wishers have stepped forward to support the contest. This Annual Tanka Contest would not be possible without your support. I owe the judges and my sponsors a big thanks and my ongoing gratitude.
To kick-start this year’s contest … here are the details.
Contest Details
Entry: FREE
Submission: One tanka per contestant.
Theme: Love
Love is an emotion we feel, manifested through various forms, moods and expressions. Love for God, love for one another, marital or relationship bonds, brotherhood / sisterhood love , parent-child bond, good friends, love in general, sibling love and rivalry, love for pets, love for country, love through charity, etc. Love is an everyday necessity, a way to sustain life and balance harmony within the universe. Love may mean sacrifice, heart ache, the swallowing of one's pride, or patriotism. You may be in a relationship for love, or you may choose not to. Either way, its presence or lack thereof makes a huge difference to each of us. Love or the lack of love defines who we are.
This month you will interpret your idea of love through your tanka. Your specific challenge is to write tanka that is 'not adult content, graphic or explicit'.
Content: Original tanka written specifically for this contest with no prior submissions or publications elsewhere either in print or online, which includes Facebook or Twitter.
(Please Note: Mandy's Pages is a family-friendly site. Therefore content should not be overly adult, profane, explicit, abusive, or sexual in nature.)
Requirement: Please read the outline for Quality criteria in this article 'Enriching Your Tanka-Writing Experience: It's All About Quality' before you submit your tanka.
Judging: All entries will be submitted to the judges as anonymous.
Announcement of Winners: Judging will take place for a period of two to four weeks after the close of the contest. This duration is based on the amount of tanka we receive during the submission period.
Submission Procedure: (Copy and Paste into email)
- Addressed to:
This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it. - Subject: ATC 2014 tanka entry (your name)
(Body of the email)
- Name:
- Place / Country:
- Tanka Entry
The Prizes
First Prize: USD 150, books and a Certificate of Excellence
Second Prize: USD 50, books and an Encouragement Award Certificate
Third Prize: Books and a Certificate of Merit
Readers' Choice Award: Books and Certificate (This award will be determined through Facebook ONLY after the contest ends)
Books
First Prize:
Catzilla : Tanka, Kyoka, and Gogyoshi about Cats – by M.Kei
A Solitary Woman - by Pamela A. Babusci
Slow Growing Ivy- by David Terelinck
Suppose - by Kathy Steinemann
The Love Journey Series, Volume 1 - by Belinda Esther Oliver
Slow Growing Ivy- by David Terelinck
Suppose - by Kathy Steinemann
The Love Journey Series, Volume 1 - by Belinda Esther Oliver
Third Prize
Slow Growing Ivy- by David Terelinck
Suppose - by Kathy Steinemann
The Love Journey Series, Volume 1 - by Belinda Esther Oliver
Meet the Judges
M. Kei:
M. Kei is a tall ship sailor and award-winning poet. He lives on the Eastern Shore of the Chesapeake Bay (USA) and apprenticed aboard a skipjack, a sail-powered oyster dredge. He now serves with a fully rigged ship.
His publications include over 1800 tanka poems in six languages and ten countries. He is the editor-in-chief of the anthology series, Take Five : Best Contemporary Tanka, and the author of Slow Motion : The Log of a Chesapeake Bay Skipjack, a log he kept in verse form of trips aboard a skipjack which is Recommend Reading by the Chesapeake Bay Project. He has edited and authored several other books of poetry and a major journal, Atlas Poetica : A Journal of Poetry of Place in Contemporary Tanka. His current project is Bright Stars, An Organic Tanka Anthology. He is the compiler of the Bibliography of English-Language Tanka and author of The History of Tanka Publishing in English.
He has also published an Asian-themed fantasy novel, Fire Dragon. His most recent book of poetry is January, A Tanka Diary. Twitter: @kujakupoet . Visit AtlasPoetica.org to read the Special Features free online.
Kala Ramesh:
Kala Ramesh is a well known award winning tanka poet who also writes in related genres like, haiku, haibun, senryu, and renku. Kala Ramesh has more than 1000 poems published in reputed journals and anthologies, both online and print editions in Japan, Europe, United Kingdom, Australia, United States of America and India.
In the last 3 years Kala has taken more than 50 workshops in the art of haiku writing and has more than 165 hours of teaching haiku, tanka and allied genres at the Symbiosis International University, for undergraduate students.
Member of Board of Editors of Modern English Tanka Press’s new anthology, Take Five: The Best Contemporary Tanka 2008/2009/2010. This anthology reviews all tanka (five line Japanese poetry related to haiku literature) published in English, during each given year and makes selections to showcase the breadth and quality of English-language tanka poetry throughout the world, including India.
'the unseen arc', Kala’s tanka collection was awarded the Snapshot Press eChapbook Award, 2012 (UK)
Anthologised in two prestigious publication:
- Haiku 21: an anthology of contemporary English-language haiku (Modern Haiku Press, 2012)
- Haiku in English - the First Hundred Years (W.W. Norton 2013)
Haiku in India - a Feature in A Hundred Gourds - 1st June 2013
Matsukaze:
Matsukaze was born in Texas,and now resides in Louisiana. He is a full time hotel administrator/auditor; while pursuing his passion as a budding classical vocalist, and stage actor. He is also an ordained minister in his local assembly. His introduction to Japanese poetry began 10 years ago when he discovered both haiku and tanka by way of black activist, professor, playwright, and poet Dr. Sonia Sanchez. Upon discovering the beauty of Sanchez's haiku he was hooked and began to practice that form primarily off and on, leaving tanka in the background. After becoming frustrated with both haiku and senryu he re-connected with Atlas Poetica editor and tanka composer, M. Kei; who offhandedly suggested that he put aside haiku and focus on tanka. March 13, 2013 marked his return to tanka and since then he has found the 31 sound-pattern form to be his choice of expression, his vehicle of being. In addition to tanka; He composes sedoka, and zuihitsu.
Sponsors
- Clive Oseman
- Darryl Rosario
Book Sponsors
- M.Kei (Catzilla : Tanka, Kyoka, and Gogyoshi about Cats)
- Pamela A. Babusci (A Solitary Woman)
- David Terelinck (Slow Growing Ivy)
- Kathy Steinemann (Suppose)
- Belinda Esther Oliver (The Love Journey Series, Volume 1)
- Kathy Uyen Nguyen - (Bright Stars, Volume 1)
- Susan Burch (Additional Surprise Gift)
Thank you so much to all the sponsors of this contest. I appreciate the way you have stepped forward to make this contest worthwhile and exciting even at the outset.
My gratitude to all the judges who have agreed to set aside time for this contest.
My appreciation goes out to all those who will eventually join this contest, and to all who help in sharing the information about this Annual Tanka Contest 2014 across the World Wide Web. I wish all the contestants the very best and look forward to reading each of your tanka.
Recently I asked M. Kei (one of the judges of the Annual Tanka Contest 2014 here at Mandy's Pages) to share his idea of a prize-worthy tanka, and this is what he says.
When I judge, I try to discern what the poet was attempting and whether she was successful at it. If she was attempting a jagged wounded piece, lyrical may not be the right treatment, for example, according to the tanka definition. Likewise, kyoka has a different mood than tanka. I also look for originality in subject, treatment, and approach. I am sick to death of reading poems about scattering a loved one's ashes, and observational poems in which a poet says, "I saw" "I heard" "I felt" or any other intrusion--it's like the shadow of a photographer in a photograph. (M. Kei)
Resources: 'Enriching Your Tanka-Writing Experience: Its All About Quality'