- The American Review
"The American Review" has served as the title of three distinct
magazine s:19th century
"The American Review", alternatively known as "American Review: A Whig Journal" and "American Whig Review", was a
New York City -basedperiodical in the 19th century. It is known today especially for the publication of "The Raven " byEdgar Allan Poe .1930s
"The American Review" was founded by the fascist publisher
Seward Collins in 1933 as the successor to hisperiodical "The Bookman". Collins intended it to serve as a vehicle for exploringreactionary ideas in order to promote an American version of fascism. Before it ceased publication in 1937, Collins published many notable literary and socialcritic s, includingT. S. Eliot ,G. K. Chesterton ,Hilaire Belloc , and many of theSouthern Agrarians . Among the latter,Allen Tate made many appearances in the pages of "The American Review".The periodical also served as a platform for English
Distributism , which advocated broad property ownership, local means of production, and subsistence farming. Many supporters of distributism weremonarchist s who favored a strong role for the church -- usuallyAnglo-Catholic orRoman Catholic and a return to a hierarchicalsociety modeled on that of theMiddle Ages . Thesebelief s were sometimes of areactionary nature, as the growingindustrialization of the West was seen as a grave threat to the creation of an ethical state.In the inaugural issue of "The American Review", Collins praised
Benito Mussolini for creating an ethical state and championed the rise to power ofAdolf Hitler , whose revolution, Collins believed, heralded the end of theCommunist threat. Collins's pro-fascist statements were a constant feature of "The American Review" throughout its literary lifespan.1960s and 1970s
A literary magazine entitled "The New American Review" debuted in 1967; in 1973 the title was reduced to "The American Review". It ceased publication in 1977.
Authors whose work was published in the American Review included
E. L. Doctorow ,Ralph Ellison ,Philip Roth ,Gunter Grass ,Ian McEwan ,Woody Allen ,Max Apple ,William Gass , andNorman Mailer .References
External links
* [http://www.arlj.com The American Review]
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