Vokrug sveta

Vokrug sveta

"Vokrug sveta" ( _ru. Вокруг света, literally: "Around the World") is the oldest magazine in the Russian language still being published (and one of the biggest magazines in modern Russia). The first issue was printed in St. Petersburg in December 1860, almost thirty years before the establishment of the "National Geographic Magazine". It is thus one of the oldest popular science magazines in the world.

The magazine was conceived by a Warsaw-born entrepreneur, Boleslaw Wolf, who defined "Vokrug Sveta" as a lavishly illustrated yearly publication dedicated to "physical geography, natural sciences, the most recent discoveries, inventions, and observations". [Quoted from: Naiman, Eric. "The Landscape of Stalinism". University of Washington Press, 2003. Page 231.] Its roster of authors included Alfred Brehm, Camille Flammarion, Nikolai Przhevalsky, and Nikolay Miklukho-Maklay.

The Wolf edition was discontinued after 1868 for unclear reasons [ru icon [http://www.vokrugsveta.ru/country/?item_id=2687&vs=1 "How "Vokrug Sveta" Was Born"] ] , but the project of a popular geographical journal was revived in 1885 by Ivan Sytin, a printer who directed his periodicals toward a wider audience. Sytin's "Vokrug sveta" was issued monthly and featured original translations of popular adventure fiction from such authors as Jules Verne, Rudyard Kipling, and Arthur Conan Doyle.

The Russian Revolution brought this period of the magazine's history to an abrupt termination. Like every other periodical of Imperial Russia, "Vokrug sveta" suspended publication for ten years. It was back in print under the auspices of the Young Communist League, specifically targeted toward the youth audience. Contributing editors included some of the finest Soviet science fiction authors, including Vladimir Obruchev and Ivan Yefremov. In 1938, the magazine's headquarters relocated from Leningrad to Moscow, and its publication was altogether suspended during World War II.

For Soviet readers, "Vokrug sveta" represented a rare source of authentic, fully-illustrated information about foreign cultural attractions. Unsurprisingly, the Komsomol bosses insisted that the magazine cover domestic tourist attractions rather than those situated outside the USSR. [Janet F. Davidson, Philip Scranton. "The Business of Tourism: Place, Faith, and History". University of Pennsylvania Press, 2006. ISBN 0812239687. Page 165.] In the 1960s and 1970s, the magazine continued to grow in popularity and increased the circulation to 2,300,000 copies by 1971. A television subsidiary was also popular, particularly in the early 1990s. As of 2007, "Vokrug sveta" ranks third among Russia's popular monthlies, with a circulation hovering around 250,000. The free archives of past issues (starting from 1980) are available on their website.

References

External links

* [http://vokrugsveta.ru/publishing/vs/ Website of "Vokrug sveta"]


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