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#HippoCampus: Volume 2 Call For Submissions!

We hope that you all enjoyed the inaugural edition of HippoCampus, the online magazine for Equine History Collective members. We’ve certainly received lots of positive feedback. It’s time for our next call for articles and this time we’re promoting a theme that’s close to our hearts.

Our HippoCampus logo and title reflect the ongoing fascination with fabulous and mysterious animals, especially those with equine or equid characteristics. Now, we’re turning our attention to another fantastic equid: the unicorn.

Did you know that the 9th April is National Unicorn Day in the UK? The unicorn is famously Scotland’s national animal. Unicorns also have meaning and symbolism for diverse communities for diverse reasons. Help us celebrate unicorns together, internationally and inclusively, with photos, artwork, imagery, and words in our next issue of HippoCampus.

The Unicorn Rests in a Garden. Metropolitan Museum of Art, Cloisters 1495-1505

 

Share your experiences and encounters with unicorns in every kind of space: books, movies, on the street, and in artwork and historic artefacts. What’s more, our next photo competition gives you the opportunity to share your own images of unicorns anywhere and everywhere. “Encountering Unicorns” is the theme, and for those of you who would like to develop it more academically, why not prepare a paper for our forthcoming conference hosted by Roger Williams University in September 2023?

Don’t forget you can also submit reviews, views, good-read suggestions, research updates, good news stories, and more, with or without unicorns!  

Send your questions, photos, and other contributions to communications@equinehistory.org by May 1, 2023.  Don’t forget: HippoCampus is available to members of the Equine History Collective only, and if you’d like to continue to have access to the magazine, you need to join the EHC.

And finally: a big thank you to secretary Lonneke Delpeut for the theme proposal. Lonneke’s own fascination with unicorns is, as the saying goes in academic circles, well-documented, and we’re pretty sure she’ll be planning something special for this issue!

 

 

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