Almost ten years ago. I posted about intellectual journals worth reading. As a Xmas bonus I thought it useful to repost it (with a few titles deleted since they no longer operate). I started with a question about which (English language) journals would pass a test which included such criteria as –
-
Depth of treatment
-
Breadth of coverage (not just political)
-
Cosmopolitan in taste (not just anglo-saxon)
-
clarity of writing
-
skeptical in tone
My
own regular favourite reading includes The
Guardian Long Reads and book
reviews, London
Review of Books and the
New York Review of Books –
and the occasional glance at the New
Yorker; New
Statesman;
and Spiked.
This choice betrays a certain “patrician” position – not too
“tribal”…….although my initial google search limited itself
to such epithets as “left”, “progressive”, “green”;;
“radical” and “humanist”.
It
threw up a couple of lists – one with “progressive”
titles,
the other with
“secular”.
From
these, I have extracted the other titles which might lay some claims
to satisfying the stringent criteria set above…..
Current
Affairs is
a fairly new American radical journal which looks to be very
well-written eg this
take-down of The Economist mag
Dissent;
a US leftist stalwart
Jacobin;
a leftist E-mag which
I have grown to appreciate – one of the few to which I subscribe
Lettre
International;
a fascinating quarterly published in
German,
Italian, Spanish, Hungarian and Romanian. It
makes available translated articles with superb etchings..
Literary
Hub;
a literary site with original selections and frequent posts. Not
one I now follow
Los
Angeles Review of Books;
relatively
new journal whose
writing occasionally grates
Monthly
Review;
an old US stalwart with good solid analysis
Mother
Jones;
more journalistic US progressive
N+1;
one of the new and smoother leftist mags
New
Humanist;
an important strand of UK thought
New
Left Review;
THE great
UK
leftist journal - running on a quarterly basis since 1960. Also
one to which I subscribe
New
Republic;
solid US monthly
Prospect (UK);
rather too smooth UK monthly
The
American Prospect (US);
ditto US
Public
Books –
an impressive recent website (2012) to encourage open intellectual
debate
Quillette; a
"free-thinking"
contrarian and libertarian journal
Resurgence
and Ecologist;
ditto UK Greens
Sceptic;
celebration of important strand of UK scepticism
Slate;
more right wing
Social
Europe;
a european social democratic E-journal whose short articles are a bit
too predictable for my taste
The
Atlantic;
one of my favourite US mags
The
Conversation;
a rare venture which uses academics as journalists
The
Marginalian; an interesting cultural journal which
I no longer follow – being a bit too predictable
The
Nation; America's
oldest weekly, for the "progressive" community
The
New Yorker;
impressive US writing which
I’ve been tempted to subscribe to
Washington
Independent Review;
a new website borne of the frustration about the disappearance of so
many book review columns
World
Socialist Website;
good on critical global journalism
Academic
journals
I
would not normally deign academic journals with a second glance since
theirs is an incestuous breed – with arcane language and
specialized focus which breaches at least two of the above five
tests. But Political
Quarterly stands
apart with the superbly written (social democratic) analyses which
have been briefing us for almost a century. Parliamentary
Affairs; West
European Politics
and Governance run
it close with more global coverage.
Self-styled
“Radical“ journals
seem,
curiously, to be gaining strength at precisely the moment the left is
collapsing everywhere.
Beyond
the small grove of explicitly revolutionary titles lies a vast forest
of critical publications. From “Action Research” to “Anarchist
Studies”, from “Race and Class” to “Review of
Radical Political Economics”, an impressive array of dissident
ventures appears to be thriving. As Western capitalism
jabs repeatedly at the auto-destruct button, it may seem only logical
that rebel voices are getting louder. But logic has nothing to do it
with it. Out in the real world, the Left is moribund. Socialism has
become a heritage item. Public institutions, including UK
universities, are ever more marketised. Alternatives seem in short
supply.
So,
far from being obvious, the success of radical journals is a bit of a
puzzle. And they have proved they have staying power. The past few
years have seen a clutch of titles entering late middle age,
including those in the Marxist tradition, such as “New Left
Review” (founded 1960), “Critique” (1973)
and “Capital and Class” (1977), as well as more broadly
critical ventures, such as “Transition” (1961)
and “Critical Inquiry” (1974). Numerous other titles
have emerged in the intervening years. And they are still
coming.
Recent titles include “Power and
Education”, “Journal of Critical Globalisation
Studies” and “Human Geography: A New Radical Journal”.
Of course, some disciplines provide more fertile soil for such
ventures than others. In cultural studies, politics, geography and
sociology, radicalism has entered the mainstream. But even the more
stony ground of economics nurtures a wide assortment of dissident
titles.
A
concept with unrealized potential,
I feel, is that of the “global roundup” ”
with
selections of representative writing from around the globe. Courrier
international is
a good, physical, Francophone example – the others being “virtual”
or E-journals eg Arts
and Letters Daily a
good literary, anglo-saxon exemplar; The
Intercept a
political one; with Eurozine taking
the main award for its selection of the most interesting articles
from Europe’s 80 plus cultural journals
I
learn one main thing from this review - how tribal most journals
are. Most
seem to cater for a niche political market. Only N+1 (and the New
Yorker) makes an effort to cover the world of ideas from a broader
standpoint...The lead articles which Eurozine gives us from different
parts of Europe makes it an interesting read; and Political Quarterly
is a model for clear writing - even if it is a bit too British in its
scope. But
I give away both my age and agnostic tendencies when I say that my
favourite journal remains "Encounter" which was shockingly
revealed in the late 80s to have
been partially funded by the CIA and
which therefore shut up shop in 1990....
The
entire set of 1953-1990 issues are
archived here –
and the range and quality of the authors given space can be
admired. European
notebooks – new societies and old politics 1954-1985;
is a book devoted to one of its most regular writers, the Swiss
Francois Bondy (2005)
A
generation of outstanding European thinkers emerged out of the rubble
of World War II. It was a group unparalleled in their probing of an
age that had produced totalitarianism as a political norm, and the
Holocaust as its supreme nightmarish achievement. Figures ranging
from George Lichtheim, Ignazio Silone, Raymond Aron, Andrei Amalrik,
among many others, found a home in Encounter. None stood taller
or saw further than Francois Bondy of Zurich.
European
Notebooks contains most of the articles that Bondy (1915-2003)
wrote for Encounter under the stewardship of Stephen
Spender, Irving Kristol, and then for the thirty years that Melvin
Lasky served as editor. Bondy was that rare unattached intellectual,
"free of every totalitarian temptation" and, as Lasky
notes, unfailing in his devotion to the liberties and civilities of a
humane social order. European Notebooks offers a window
into a civilization that came to maturity during the period in which
these essays were written.
Bondy's
essays themselves represent a broad sweep of major figures and events
in the second half of the twentieth century. His spatial outreach
went from Budapest to Tokyo and Paris. His political essays extended
from George Kennan to Benito Mussolini. And his prime metier, the
cultural figures of Europe, covered Sartre, Kafka, Heidegger and
Milosz. The analysis was uniformly fair minded but unstinting in its
insights. Taken together, the variegated themes he raised in his work
as a Zurich journalist, a Paris editor, and a European homme de
lettres sketch guidelines for an entrancing portrait of the
intellectual as cosmopolitan.