Monthly Magazine, 1810 (John Adams Library, Boston Public Library)

The Monthly Magazine (1796–1843) of London[1][2] began publication in February 1796.

Contributors

Richard Phillips was the publisher and a contributor on political issues. The editor for the first ten years was a literary jack-of-all-trades, Dr John Aikin.[3] Other contributors included William Blake,[4] Samuel Taylor Coleridge, George Dyer, Henry Neele, Charles Lamb,[3] and James Hogg.[5] The magazine also published the earliest fiction by Charles Dickens, the first of what would become Sketches by Boz.[6]

The circulation of the magazine in early 1830s was about 600.[6] From 1839 the magazine was for two years edited by Francis Foster Barham and John Abraham Heraud. Its content in that period has been described by a recent American analyst as "popularizations of post-Kantian philosophy, esoteric mystical commentary, literary effusions, and idealistic calls for child-centered education and communitarian socialism."[7]

See also

References

  1. "ESTC - Search Results". estc.bl.uk.
  2. New Cambridge Bibliography of English Literature, v.2. Cambridge University Press, 1971
  3. 1 2 Arthur Sherbo. From the "Monthly Magazine, and British Register": Notes on Milton, Pope, Boyce, Johnson, Sterne, Hawkesworth, and Prior. Studies in Bibliography, Vol. 43 (1990).
  4. Archibald George Blomefield Russell. "The engravings of William Blake". Houghton Mifflin, 1912.
  5. Hunter, Adrian (ed.) (2020), James Hogg: Contributions to English, Irish and American Periodicals, Edinburgh University Press, pp. 237 - 240, ISBN 9780748695980
  6. 1 2 Christies Retrieved 9 August 2018.
  7. Charles Capper Associate Professor of History Boston University (7 September 1994). Margaret Fuller: An American Romantic Life Volume I: The Private Years. Oxford University Press. p. 332. ISBN 978-0-19-976234-7. Retrieved 2 April 2013.

Further reading

Media related to Monthly Magazine (London: 1796-1843) at Wikimedia Commons

  • Monthly Magazine, or, British register. London: Printed for R. Phillips, 1796 onwards.
  • Geoffrey Carnall (1954). "The Monthly Magazine". Review of English Studies. 5 (18): 158–64.
  • Kenneth Curry (1983). "Monthly Magazine, The". In Sullivan, Alvin (ed.). British Literary Magazines: 1789–1836: The Romantic Age. Westport, Conn.: Greenwood. pp. 314–9. ISBN 0313228728.
  • Ward and Waller, eds. Cambridge History of English Literature, vol. 12. G. P. Putnam's Sons, 1916
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