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American Girl (defunct) Bananas, Scholastic (1975–1984) Scout Life (Formerly Boys' Life) Children's Digest, Parents Magazine Press (1950-2009) Contact Kids, Sesame Workshop (1979–2001) Cricket; Discovery Girls (defunct) Disney Adventures (defunct) Dynamite, Scholastic (1974–1992) The Electric Company Magazine, Scholastic (1972–1987)
He turned his article for the June 1966 issue on the Johnstown Flood, Run for Your Lives, [15] into a full-length book titled, The Johnstown Flood. When it became an unexpected bestseller, McCullough left the magazine in 1968 to commit full-time to writing. Later American Heritage articles by McCullough on the transcontinental railroad and ...
The Crisis has been in continuous print since 1910, and it is the oldest Black-oriented magazine in the world. [1] Today, The Crisis is "a quarterly journal of civil rights, history, politics and culture and seeks to educate and challenge its readers about issues that continue to plague African Americans and other communities of color." [2]
Pages in category "Cultural magazines published in the United States" The following 62 pages are in this category, out of 62 total. This list may not reflect recent changes .
The May 1977 issue contained an insert from the publisher, Rhett Austell, informing the subscribers that Horizon would become a monthly magazine in soft cover. [3] The reason was plainly financial. Horizon was not able to attract enough subscribers to maintain the luxury magazine devoted to the arts and history that had been envisioned by ...
In the first years since inception in 1977, the magazine was an anticommunist bi-monthly called Chronicles of Culture, edited by Leopold Tyrmand (1920–85), pen name of Jan Andrzej Stanislaw Kowalski, a Polish novelist and co-founder of the Rockford Institute who had previously written for The New Yorker.
Though grounded in history, it welcomes works from all disciplines bearing on the early American period—for example, literature, law, political science, anthropology, archaeology, material culture, and cultural studies. The journal is named after the College of William and Mary where it was founded in 1892. [1]
Middletown: A Study in American Culture was primarily a look at changes in the white population of a typical American city between 1890 and 1925, a period of great economic change. The Lynds used the "approach of the cultural anthropologist " (see field research and social anthropology ), existing documents, statistics, old newspapers ...