vertical_align_top
View:
Images:
S · M

Defunct political magazines published in the United States

This list has 1 sub-list and 127 members. See also Defunct magazines published in the United States, Political magazines published in the United States, Defunct political magazines
FLAG
      
favorite
  • The Blast (magazine)
    The Blast (magazine) US magazine
     0    0
    rank #1 ·
    The Blast was a semi-monthly anarchist periodical published by Alexander Berkman in San Francisco, California, USA from 1916 through 1917. The publication had roots in Emma Goldman's magazine Mother Earth, having been launched when her former consort Berkman left his editorial position at that publication.
  • Human Events
    Human Events Conservative American political newspaper
     0    0
    rank #2 ·
    Human Events is an American conservative political news and analysis website. Founded in 1944 as a print newspaper, Human Events became a digital-only publication in 2013.
  • The Socialist Woman
    The Socialist Woman 20th-century American magazine
     0    0
    rank #3 ·
    The Socialist Woman (1907–1914) was a monthly magazine edited by Josephine Conger-Kaneko. Its aim was to educate women about socialism by discussing women's issues from a socialist standpoint. It was renamed The Progressive Woman in 1909 and The Coming Nation in 1913. Its contributors included Socialist Party activist Kate Richards O'Hare, suffragist Alice Stone Blackwell, orator Eugene V. Debs, poet Ella Wheeler Wilcox, and other notable writers and activists.
  • The Chicagoan
    The Chicagoan US periodical
     0    0
    rank #4 ·
    The Chicagoan was an American magazine modeled after The New Yorker published from June 1926 until April 1935. Focusing on the cultural life of the city of Chicago, each issue of The Chicagoan contained art, music, and drama reviews, profiles of personalities and institutions, commentaries on the local scene, and editorials, along with cartoons and original art.
  • Plain Talk Monthly, American, anti-Communist magazine (1946–1950)
     0    0
    rank #5 ·
    Plain Talk was an American monthly anticommunist magazine that was published for 44 months from 1946 to 1950. Its editor-in-chief was Isaac Don Levine.
  • Governing (magazine)
    Governing (magazine) US magazine
     0    0
    rank #6 ·
    Governing is a website, edited and published in Washington, D.C., that covers state and local government in the United States. Originally a national monthly magazine, it was published in print from 1987 to 2019. It covers policy, politics, and the management of government enterprises. Its subject areas include government finance, land use, economic development, the environment, technology, and transportation.
  • The Liberator (magazine)
    The Liberator (magazine) monthly socialist magazine established by Max and Crystal Eastman in 1918
     0    0
    rank #7 ·
    The Liberator was a monthly socialist magazine published from 1918 to 1924. It was established by Max Eastman and his sister Crystal Eastman in 1918 to continue the work of The Masses, which was shut down by the wartime mailing regulations of the U.S. government. Intensely political, the magazine included copious quantities of art, poetry, and fiction along with political reporting and commentary. The publication was an organ of the Communist Party of America (CPA) from late 1922 and was merged with two other publications to form The Workers Monthly in 1924.
  • The American Spectator
    The American Spectator American conservative magazine
     0    0
    rank #8 ·
    The American Spectator is a conservative American magazine covering news and politics, edited by R. Emmett Tyrrell Jr. and published by the non-profit American Spectator Foundation. It was founded in 1967 by Tyrrell (the current editor-in-chief) and Wladyslaw Pleszczynski (its editorial director as of 1980).
  •  0    0
    rank #9 ·
    American Review (Global Perspectives on US Affairs) was an online political magazine published twice a year by the United States Studies Centre at the University of Sydney in Australia. The magazine was established in 2006. As the magazine was based outside America, the emphasis was on a "fair and balanced" interpretation of American affairs with some focus on the US relationship with Australia and the Pacific region.
  • The Class Struggle (magazine)
    The Class Struggle (magazine) political magazine
     0    0
    rank #10 ·
    The Class Struggle was a bi-monthly Marxist theoretical magazine published in New York City by the Socialist Publication Society. The SPS also published a series of pamphlets, mostly reprints from the magazine during the short period of its existence. Among the initial editors of the publication were Ludwig Lore, Marxist theoreticians Louis B. Boudin and Louis C. Fraina, the former of whom left the publication in 1918. In the third and final year of the periodical, The Class Struggle emerged as one of the primary English-language voices of the left wing factions within the American Socialist Party and its final issue was published in 1919 by the nascent Communist Labor Party of America.
Desktop | Mobile
This website is part of the FamousFix entertainment community. By continuing past this page, and by your continued use of this site, you agree to be bound by and abide by the Terms of Use. Loaded in 0.14 secs.
Terms of Use  |  Copyright  |  Privacy
Copyright 2006-2025, FamousFix