THE ATLANTIC MONTHLY

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:''The Atlantic redirects here; for the ocean, see Atlantic Ocean.''
'''The Atlantic Monthly''' (also known as '''The Atlantic''') is an American literary/cultural magazine founded in Boston in 1857. Its creators were a group of writers that included Ralph Waldo Emerson, Henry Wadsworth Longfellow, Oliver Wendell Holmes, Sr., and James Russell Lowell (who would become its first editor). The current CEO and group publisher is 'John Fox Sullivan'.[1]

Contents
Format and periodicity
Literary history
Ownership
Trivia
List of editors
References
External links

Format and periodicity


The cover of the original issue of The Atlantic Monthly, November 1, 1857.

Originally a monthly publication, the magazine, subscribed to by 480,000 readers, now publishes ten times a year and features articles in the fields of political science and foreign affairs, as well as book reviews. In 2005, ''The Atlantic'' announced that it would cease including short stories in its regular issues, but rather in a single annual special edition.
There are also articles on other intellectually challenging topics, e.g., the ongoing computer-related and Asian-society writings by James Fallows.

Literary history


''The Atlantic Monthly'' was the first to publish Julia Ward Howe's "Battle Hymn of the Republic" (on February 1, 1862), and William Parker's "The Freedman's Story" (in February and March 1866). It published Charles W. Eliot's "The New Education" (a call for practical reform) that resulted in his appointment to Presidency of Harvard University in 1869. It also published some of Charles Chesnutt's tales before they were collected for The Conjure Woman. In August 1963, the magazine published Martin Luther King, Jr.'s defense of civil disobedience in "Letter from Birmingham Jail". The magazine was a point of connection between Emily Dickinson and Thomas Wentworth Higginson; having read an article in the ''Atlantic'' by Higginson, Dickinson asked him to become her mentor. It has also published many of the works of Mark Twain, including one that managed to escape publication until 2001. Its best known current writers are James Fallows, Mark Bowden, Corby Kummer, and Caitlin Flanagan.
The magazine has also published speculative articles that inspired the development of whole new technologies. The classic example is the publication of Vannevar Bush's essay "As We May Think" in July 1945, which inspired Douglas Engelbart and later Ted Nelson to develop the modern workstation and hypertext technology.
In April, 2005, the ''Atlantic'' editors decided to cease publishing fiction in regular issues in favor of a newsstand-only annual fiction issue.

Ownership


February 1862 edition of '''The Atlantic Monthly''', with ''The Battle Hymn of the Republic'' on the front page.

For all but its recent existence, ''The Atlantic'' has been known as a distinctively New England literary magazine (as opposed to ''Harper's'' and later ''The New Yorker'', both from New York), and by its third year was published by the famous Boston publishing house of Ticknor and Fields (later to become part of Houghton Mifflin). The magazine was purchased by its then editor, Ellery Sedgwick, during World War I, but remained in Boston.
In 1980, the magazine was acquired by Mortimer Zuckerman, property magnate and founder of Boston Properties, who became its Chairman.
On September 27, 1999, ownership of the magazine was transferred from Zuckerman to David G. Bradley, owner of the beltway news-focused National Journal Group. Although Bradley had promised that no major changes were in store, the magazine's publishers announced in April 2005, that the editorial offices would leave their long-time home at 77 North Washington St. in Boston to join the company's advertising and circulation divisions in Washington, D.C. apparently due to the high cost of Boston real estate.[2] Later, in August, Bradley told the ''New York Observer'', cost cutting from the move would amount to a minor $200,000–$300,000 and those savings would be swallowed by severance related spending. The reason, then, was to create a hub in Washington where the top minds from all of Bradley's publications could collaborate. Few of the Boston staff agreed to relocate, allowing Bradley to embark on an open search for a new editorial staff.[3]

Trivia



★ The magazine has one of the longest-running cryptic crosswords, compiled by Emily Cox and Henry Rathvon. Since March 2006 the Puzzler, as it is known, is only published online.

★ The magazine was also where Eudora Welty's "A Worn Path" was first published.

List of editors



James Russell Lowell, 1857–1861

James Thomas Fields, 1861–1871

William Dean Howells, 1871–1881

Thomas Bailey Aldrich, 1881–1890

Horace Elisha Scudder, 1890–1898

Walter Hines Page, 1898–1899

Bliss Perry, 1899–1909

Ellery Sedgwick, 1909–1938

Edward A. Weeks, 1938–1966

★ Robert Manning, 1966–1980

William Whitworth, 1980–1999

Michael Kelly, 1999–2002

Cullen Murphy, interim editor, never named editor-in-chief, 2002–2006

James Bennet, 2006—

References


1. http://www.theatlantic.com/a/masthead.mhtml Atlantic masthead
2. "Atlantic, 148-year institution, leaving city magazine of Twain, James, Howells heads to capital, ''Boston Globe'', April 15, 2005 [1]
3. "Atlantic owner scours country for cinder-editor", ''New York Observer'', August 29September 5, 2005

External links



Official website

Online archive of ''Atlantic Monthly'' (earliest issues up to December 1901)

''The Atlantic Monthly'' magazines at Project Gutenberg

A History of ''The Atlantic Monthly''

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