List of United States Magazines - Politics

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)

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Famous quotes containing the word politics:

    Politics is war without bloodshed while war is politics with bloodshed.
    Mao Zedong (1893–1976)

    The newspaper reader says: this party is destroying itself through such mistakes. My higher politics says: a party that makes such mistakes is finished—it has lost its instinctive sureness.
    Friedrich Nietzsche (1844–1900)

    ...to many a mother’s heart has come the disappointment of a loss of power, a limitation of influence when early manhood takes the boy from the home, or when even before that time, in school, or where he touches the great world and begins to be bewildered with its controversies, trade and economics and politics make their imprint even while his lips are dewy with his mother’s kiss.
    J. Ellen Foster (1840–1910)