We’re now accepting pitches for our annual Culture Issue! This year’s issue has a DIY theme. We mean this broadly, though. We’re accepting stories about anything that incorporates the spirit, ethos and feel of DIY, from movement and space building to more tactile endeavours like zine creation and art. Our news, arts and ideas, and features sections are all open. This includes our back page open letter, memoir and opinion columns, and culture column. We publish Canadian residents only and accept queries (not completed manuscripts). We suggest familiarizing yourself with the magazine and previously published stories before pitching. For more details on the kinds of pieces we run, see below.
We like stories that aren’t likely to be found anywhere else, ideally with a social justice tie-in. In your pitch, it’s always great to say why you want to tell this story now, why you’re the one to tell it, sources you plan to consult, and any takeaways your piece will include for the reader. In other words, what might people learn, or start to learn, from reading your story?
Pitches are due July 21 and can be sent to Sarah Ratchford, sarah at thismagazine dot ca.
Thank you for pitching This Magazine! We can’t wait to read your ideas.
Writers’ Guidelines
This Magazine welcomes queries only, not already written pieces. A good This Magazine article offers background and context to ongoing national issues, a challenge to the mainstream media perspective, or an important story that hasn’t been told elsewhere. Subject matter includes politics, culture, the arts, social issues, labour, feminism, mental health, race/racism, Indigenous issues, and sexuality, with a focus on quality writing and in-depth reportage. Please note: This Magazine publishes Canadian residents only
Before you submit anything to the magazine, be sure you are familiar with its approach. Pay particular attention to writing style and content. Articles for This Magazine should have a journalistic approach, and be written in language simple enough to be comprehensible to a high school student, with enough research and insight to be interesting to a PhD. Assume that you’re talking to knowledgeable readers (because you are). We encourage writers to grapple with big ideas, but they must be conveyed with wit and style, avoiding artistic, journalistic, legal, or academic jargon.