
Writing
- Ladoos by Anonymous
- Letter from the Editors
- Sculpture by Anonymous
- Fading Echoes by Nathan Aaron
- PATH by Sid Abelson
- A Poem Dedicated to the Rituals of Women by Isabella Ahern
- Don't Fly Too Close to the Sun by Lila Ahitov
- Suffocating Relief by Lila Ahitov
- Where’s My Sporking Place? by Lila Ahitov
- The Choices She Didn’t Make, The Chances She Didn’t Take by Sophie Bendersky
- The NRA by Geneva Bennett
- The Boy by Dylan Chan
- Leaping Children by Samantha Ciociola
- My Double Life by Talon Cleveland
- to little me by Peyton Commerer
- Wistoragic by Lee D
- i take it back by Prisha Dalal
- what if i did it? what would you do? by Prisha Dalal
- The Sky by Nima Dana
- Identity by Sarah Devney
- Doubt by Roman Fent
- Strange Things and Growing Pains by Roman Fent
- I Sit Here and Scroll by Gaven Graham
- Vitiligo: Flowers of Hope by Diana Ha
- Her Golden Lotuses by Xinyuan Hao
- In the Early Summer by Allison Hedgepeth
- Older by Anita Marie Júlca
- Names by Hannah Karim
- Divine Angel of Teenage Girls by Quinn Kelly
- Inner Demons by Kriti Kumar
- The girl who cried during Dumbo by Lili Lang
- I Don’t Even Know When to End, Talking About Worth by Ying Ham Lee
- Finish Line by Kaela Li
- In The Warmth of the Golden Sun by Jaiden Li
- After I Died by May Lin
- leaky faucet by May Lin
- every-single-thing by Andie McGregor
- All Summer by Heidi Nelson
- Fall of a Star by Deetya Raja
- Echoes of Silence: Call of Humanity for Women by Aakanksha Roy
- 38 Weeks Overnight by Sophie S.
- Legacy by Chloe Schoenfeld
- Not Worth It by Ruby Seidner
- Growing Up and Down by Saskia Sommer
- Mona Lisa of a Mistake by Zoie Tran
- Taking My Sunshine Piece by Piece by Emily Weldon
Digital Editions
About this issue
Issue XXII Theme: Humanity
Across generations, distances and cultures, our humanity connects us. Despite this seemingly infinite connection, however, one of the most fundamental parts of being human is being unique. This dichotomy is at the crux of the human experience and something we have all shared. Tell us your stories: those of your unique human experience. Share with us the joys and pains that have been a part of your humanity. Speak on your relationships: those with family, friends, significant others. When have you felt most connected to other humans? Most distant? What makes you feel close to your own humanity? Tell us about the times you felt less than human, and when others convinced you that you were. Has humanity changed? Or will it? We seek expressions of your culture, traditions, mannerisms. Share your innermost thoughts and your outermost traits. What makes you unique? What makes you human?
elementia is a literary arts magazine published to represent and uplift young adults. We accept original poetry, fiction, nonfiction, graphic stories, photography and illustrations.