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In Lebanon the first Arabic journal was an annual review, Majmu fawaid li nukhbat afadil which was first published in 1851. [1] The first political, literary, and scientific magazine, the first children's magazine, and the women's magazine in the country were established in the period between 1870 and 1896. [2]
In France there are many magazines which are mostly literary magazines, women's magazines and news magazines. [1] One of the early literary magazines, Nouvelles de la république des lettres, was launched by Pierre Bayle in France in 1684. [2]
Revue Noire was created in 1991 in Paris with the objective of demonstrating that "there is art in Africa". [1] The name relates to the Revue Blanche, a French magazine of the Fifties, to Josephine Baker and to Paris of the Thirties when there was a discussion about "revues nègres".
Revue Noire was founded in 1991 by Jean Loup Pivin, Pascal Martin Saint Lóon, Bruno Tilliette, and Simon Njami. [1] Their goal was to give high-quality printed attention to contemporary African art. It covered varying subjects from sculpture, painting, photography, dance, theatre, music and literature. [ 2 ]
Jeune Afrique (English: Young Africa) is a French-language pan-African weekly news magazine, founded in 1960 in Tunis and subsequently published in Paris by Jeune Afrique Media Group. It is the most widely read pan-African magazine. [1] It offers coverage of African and international political, economic and cultural news.
Magazine Language Frequency Publisher/parent company Official website Automoto: French: Monthly: La Sentinelle: Business Magazine: French: Weekly: La Sentinelle
The founder and Editor-in-chief was Annette Mbaye d'Erneville, a radio journalist, writer and Director of Programming of Radio Senegal. [5] The editorial team was composed primarily of women, many of whom were renowned intellectuals, including Oulimata Bâ; psychoanalyst Solange Faladé; poet Virginie Camara, and Henriette Bathily, Director of the cultural department of the French Cultural ...
Highlights of the show included the News & Notes Roundtable, where notable black journalists, bloggers, business leaders, politicians, activists and personalities debated the issues of the day. The program was produced at the NPR West studios in Culver City, California. The show was awarded a $3 million grant from the Ford Foundation in 2006. [1]