Politics
- The American Conservative (conservative, founded 2002, circulation as of 2005 15,000)
- The American Prospect (liberal, 1990, 100,000)
- The American Spectator (conservative, 1967, 50,000)
- The Atlantic (liberal, 1857, n/a)
- The Brown Spectator (conservative and libertarian, founded 2002, n/a)
- Commentary (neoconservative, 1945, 25,000)
- Commonwealth (non-partisan, 1996, 10,000)
- Democracy (progressive/liberal, 2006, n/a)
- First Things (Christian conservative, 1990, n/a)
- The Freeman (libertarian, 1946, n/a)
- Harper's Magazine (liberal, 1850, 220,000)
- Human Events (conservative, 1944, 75,000)
- Human Rights Quarterly (liberal, 1979, 1,533)
- In These Times (liberal, 1976, 20,000)
- Jewish Currents (Jewish left, 1947, n/a)
- Liberation (pacifist, 1956, n/a)
- Liberty (libertarian, 1987, n/a)
- Lilith (Jewish feminist, 1976, n/a)
- Lumpen (arts, 1991, n/a)
- Moment (Jewish-diverse, 1975, n/a)
- Mother Jones (left, 1976, 201,233)
- Multinational Monitor (liberal, 1980, n/a )
- The Nation (left, 1865, 139,612)
- National Review (conservative, 1955, 162,091)
- The New Republic (center-left, 1914, 90,826)
- The New York Review of Books (liberal-left, 1963, 140,000)
- The New Yorker (liberal and non-partisan, 1925, 1,062,310)
- Policy Review (center-right, 2001, 6,000)
- Politics (non-partisan, 1980)
- The Progressive (left, 1909, 68,000)
- The Progressive Populist (liberal, 1995, 20,000)
- Reason (libertarian, 1968, 52,000)
- Sojourners (Christian, 1971, n/a)
- Tikkun (Jewish-left, 1971, 20,000)
- Utne Reader (liberal, 1984, n/a)
- Washington Monthly (center-left, 1969, 18,000)
- The Weekly Standard (conservative, 1995, 65,256)
- YaleGlobal Online (international, globalization and anti-globalization, 2002, n/a)
- Z Magazine (left, 1987, 20,000)
Read more about this topic: List Of United States Magazines
Famous quotes containing the word politics:
“We are naïve and moralistic women. We are human beings. Who find politics a blight upon the human condition. And do not know how one copes with it except through politics.”
—Kate Millett (b. 1934)
“They who have been bred in the school of politics fail now and always to face the facts. Their measures are half measures and makeshifts merely. They put off the day of settlement, and meanwhile the debt accumulates.”
—Henry David Thoreau (18171862)
“Hardly a man in the world has an opinion upon morals, politics or religion which he got otherwise than through his associations and sympathies. Broadly speaking, there are none but corn-pone opinions. And broadly speaking, Corn-Pone stands for Self- Approval. Self-approval is acquired mainly from the approval of other people. The result is Conformity.”
—Mark Twain [Samuel Langhorne Clemens] (18351910)