The London Magazine

The London Magazine

"The London Magazine" is a historied publication of arts, literature and miscellaneous interests. Its history ranges nearly three centuries and five reincarnations, publishing the likes of William Wordsworth, William S. Burroughs and John Keats. It is currently in its sixth incarnation, reinvigorated by owner Christopher Arkell and the editor and English poet Sebastian Barker. It runs under the full title "The London Magazine: A Review of Literature & the Arts," publishing both emerging and established writers from around the world.

History

"The London Magazine" was founded in 1732 in political opposition to the Tory-based "Gentleman's Magazine" and ran successfully for 53 years until its closure in 1785.

In 1820, it was reborn under the editorship of John Scott who formatted the magazine along the lines of the Edinburgh publication "Blackwood's Magazine". It was during this time the magazine enjoyed its greatest literary prosperity publishing poetic luminaries such as William Wordsworth, Percy Bysshe Shelley, John Clare and John Keats. In September 1821, the first of two installments of Thomas De Quincey's Confessions of an English Opium-Eater appeared in the journal; these were later published as a book. Scott quickly began a literary row with members of the Blackwood's, in particular with Dr. John Gibson Lackhart in regards to many subjects including the Blackwood's virule criticism of the Cockney School under which Leigh Hunt and John Keats were grouped. The rivalry ended in a fatal duel between Scott and Lockhart's close friend and workmate J. H. Christie. Scott lost the duel and his life in 1821. The magazine continued under the editorship of John Taylor and included a working staff of Thomas Hood, William Hazlitt and Charles Lamb. During this time Lamb published his earliest series of "Essays of Elia" in 1823. The magazine dwindled in success towards the end of the decade due to Taylor's insistent tampering of the poets' works and was abandoned by many of its staff, including Lamb and Hazlitt. The magazine again ceased publication in 1829.

In 1900 "Harmsworth's Monthly Pictorial Magazine" was renamed the "London Magazine" by Cecil Harmsworth, the proprietor of the Daily Mail at the time. The publication continued until 1930 when it was renamed "The New London Magazine". The Australian scholar Sue Thomas referred to it as "an important informer... of popular literary tastes in the late Victorian and Edwardian periods". Despite its acclaim the magazine closed in 1933.

In 1954, a new periodical was given the name of the London Magazine, under the editorship of John Lehmann, largely continuing the tradition of the acclaimed 1940s periodical "New Writing". It was endorsed by T. S. Eliot as a non-university based periodical that would "boldly assume the existence of a public interested in serious literature." In 1961 the magazine changed hands and was undertaken by Lehmann's fellow poet and critic Alan Ross until Ross's death in 2001 prompted the Magazine's closure again. However it was quickly relaunched by Arkell and poet and critic Sebastian Barker and continues to run today.

Notable contributors include: W. H. Auden, Frank Auerbach, Louis de Bernières, Bill Brandt, William S. Burroughs, Thomas Carlyle, Henry Cary, Charles Causley, John Clare, Hartley Coleridge, Allan Cunningham, Odysseus Elytis, Gavin Ewart, Lawrence Ferlinghetti, Roy Fuller, W. S. Graham, Nadine Gordimer, Bishop of Oxford Richard Harries, Tony Harrison, William Hazlitt, Thomas Hood, Ted Hughes, Leigh Hunt, Ruth Prawer Jhabvala, John Keats, Charles Lamb, Laurie Lee, Louis MacNeice, Mary Russell Mitford, Paul Muldoon, Les Murray, Ben Okri, Harold Pinter, Sylvia Plath, Thomas de Quincey, Ethel Rolt Wheeler, Alan Ross, Richard Savage, John Scott, Iain Sinclair, Derek Walcott, Evelyn Waugh and William Wordsworth.

External links

* [http://www.thelondonmagazine.net/ Official website of the current incarnation]
* [http://onlinebooks.library.upenn.edu/webbin/serial?id=londonmag Back issues from the 18th and 19th centuries] , via The Online Books Page.


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