- Ramparts (magazine)
Infobox_Newspaper
name = Ramparts
type =Monthly
format =Magazine
foundation =1962
ceased publication =1975
price =seventy-five cents
owner =Edward M. Keating
publisher =Edward M. Keating
editor = Warren Hinckle
political =Left-wing
headquarters =San Francisco, CA |"Ramparts" was an American political and literary magazine, published from 1962 through 1975.
Founded by Edward M. Keating as a Catholic literary quarterly, the magazine became closely associated with the
New Left after executive editorWarren Hinckle hiredRobert Scheer as managing editor. Its contributors includedNoam Chomsky ,Cesar Chavez ,Seymour Hersh ,Tom Hayden ,Angela Davis ,Jonathan Kozol ,Todd Gitlin ,Sol Stern ,Tariq Ali ,Alexander Cockburn ,Christopher Hitchens andJohn Beecher . Unlike most leftist publications, "Ramparts" was expensively produced and graphically sophisticated. It reached an audience that may have been put off by the grittier "movement" publications of the time.Between December 1966 and December 1969, newsstand sales increased from 10,000 to 42,250, and the number of subscribers jumped from 87,976 to 244,069. Between December 1969 and December 1970, the number of "Ramparts"' subscribers increased to 299,937. By July 1967, the magazine was also earning around $13,000 per month from its advertising sales. A share of the magazine was owned by "New Republic" magazine owner
Martin Peretz , who became a critic of the New Left a few years later."Ramparts" was an early opponent of the
Vietnam War . Its April 1966 cover article concerned the Michigan State University Group, a technical assistance program in South Vietnam that "Ramparts" claimed was a front for CIA covert operations. In August 1966, managing editorJames F. Colaianni wrote the first national article denouncing the U.S. use ofnapalm in that conflict. "Ramparts" also unearthed the first conspiracy theory about the Kennedy assassination, and in 1967, editorSol Stern 's interview revealed that theCIA had backed theNational Student Association as part of itsCold War strategy. The magazine publishedChe Guevara 's diaries, with an introduction byFidel Castro , and the prison diaries ofEldridge Cleaver , later republished as "Soul on Ice ". Cleaver was a "Ramparts" editor when he witnessed a confrontation betweenHuey Newton and a police officer outside the magazine's office in February 1967; he soon became theBlack Panther Party 's Minister of Information.Although "Ramparts" closed its doors for good in 1975, several former staffers founded their own magazines, most notably "
Mother Jones " and "Rolling Stone ". Robert Scheer later became a featured columnist in theLos Angeles Times and is now the editor ofTruthdig and a regular participant in theNPR program "Left, Right and Center". Another "Ramparts" editor,James Ridgeway , is the Washington DC bureau chief for "Mother Jones " and the author of many muckraking books. James F. Colaianni went on to represent the radical Catholic perspective with the books "Married Priests & Married Nuns" and "The Catholic Left." Two editors, David Horowitz and Peter Collier, later underwent political conversions and became neoconservative critics of the left. For a brief time, the magazine's Washington correspondent wasBrit Hume , now of theFox News Channel .The magazine also featured discussions of arts and culture. It included contributions from (or interviews with)
Thomas Merton ,Allen Ginsberg ,Kurt Vonnegut ,Ken Kesey ,Lawrence Ferlinghetti ,Gabriel Garcia Marquez ,Susan Sontag ,Eduardo Galeano ,Peter Ustinov ,Erica Jong , andJohn Lennon .External links
* [http://www.findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_m3065/is_4_33/ai_n6077583 Ramparts] by Pam Black, "Folio: The Magazine for Magazine Management", April 1, 2004.
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