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12 - New York’s cultures of print

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  28 November 2010

Cyrus R. K. Patell
Affiliation:
New York University
Bryan Waterman
Affiliation:
New York University
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Summary

Pluralities of print

Where to begin a discussion of “New York's cultures of print”? A logical starting point might be the national magazines founded in the city around the turn of the nineteenth century, large-format monthlies like Munsey's (1889-1921), Collier's (1888-1919), and McClure's (1893-1911). These popular publications drew on New York's cutting-edge publishing technology and marketing savvy, as well as on the city's wealth of journalistic talent, to help bring into being a national middle-class reading public. Their inheritors were the “smart” magazines of the 1920s and 30s - Smart Set (1900-30), Vanity Fair (1913-36), The New Yorker (1925-present), and Esquire (1933-present) - dedicated to bringing New York's culture and style to the hinterlands. Significantly, these publications began the segmentation of the national public by targeting a niche audience with high education and income levels for the advertisers of luxury goods.

To get the full flavor of New York's cultures of print, however, we should juxtapose these frankly commercial endeavors with their more bohemian counterparts. Although they were scattered around the US and Europe, plenty of the “little magazines” that shaped the roaring twenties and radical thirties made their homes in New York, including The Dial (a revived and revised version of the Boston Transcendentalist publication of the same name, 1916-29), The Seven Arts (1916-17), The Masses (1911-17), and The New Masses (1926-48). They were succeeded by the Beat and progressive publications that hallmarked the mid-century “mimeograph revolution.” Devoted to journalism, poetry, and other forms of word and print art, downtown publications like Gilbert Sorrentino’s Neon (1956–60), Diane di Prima’s The Floating Bear (1961–68), and Ed Sanders’s Fuck You/a Magazine of the Arts (1962–65) helped to defi ne a downtown print culture that saw itself as aesthetically, economically, and politically distinct from the publishing mainstream ensconced in midtown.

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Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2010

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