Popular Magazines

2021 ◽  
pp. 133-147
Author(s):  
Douglas H. Ruben
Keyword(s):  
2010 ◽  
Author(s):  
Lindsey Shamp ◽  
Jessica L. Barnack-Tavlaris ◽  
Luz M. Garcini ◽  
Jennifer A. Jensen ◽  
Elizabeth A. Klonoff

2019 ◽  
Vol 43 (2) ◽  
pp. 349-360 ◽  
Author(s):  
Emily L. Mailey ◽  
Rebecca Gasper ◽  
Deirdre Dlugonski

2021 ◽  
pp. 205030322110153
Author(s):  
Daniel Pérez-Zapico

This article analyses the contested adoption of electric lights by the Spanish Catholic church during the Bourbon Restoration era (1874–1931). Through a careful reading of primary sources, namely Catholic popular magazines, and official documents, it will show how Catholic authorities and practitioners resisted, negotiated and, ultimately, engaged with electricity in religious spaces. The article argues that electric light contributed to wider exchanges in a non-monolithic Spanish Catholicism on the observance of traditional values or the possibilities of the church’s modernization. However, amid a particularly tense moment regarding the secular–clerical relations, the systematic use of electric lights in churches at the turn of the twentieth century—but also in other public ceremonies—contributed to the making of religious sensations aimed at attracting new believers and reasserting the presence of the institution in a disputed public space.


2009 ◽  
Vol 86 (3) ◽  
pp. 563-577 ◽  
Author(s):  
James E. Mueller ◽  
Tom Reichert

Given the upturn in young-voter turnout in 2004, this study updates an analysis of the 2000 election to determine if coverage in youth-oriented magazines remained superficial, strategic, and cynical. Quantity of coverage increased 69% over 2000 (coverage in Rolling Stone increased 300%) despite a decrease in women's magazines' coverage. There was no difference in the largely strategic, cynical, and biased coverage between the two elections. Despite a “wartime” election, the magazines rarely published stories focusing on the Iraq war. The study suggests that resurgent interest in politics among young people was not mirrored in popular magazines they read regularly.


Population ◽  
1994 ◽  
Vol 49 (1) ◽  
pp. 285
Author(s):  
J. Hd. ◽  
John R. Wilmoth ◽  
Patrick Ball
Keyword(s):  

1896 ◽  
Vol 42 (176) ◽  
pp. 54-62 ◽  
Author(s):  
G. E. Shuttleworth

The fact that considerable attention has been drawn of late years, both in the medical and lay press, to the subject of operations undertaken for the relief of idiocy and other mental deficiencies of child-life, must be my excuse for taking up the time of this section with observations resting, not alone upon my own limited experience, but largely on that of others. The operation of craniectomy, or as some prefer to call it linear craniotomy (that is the cutting out of strips of bone from the skull), has, indeed, almost passed from the domain of science to the region of romance, and articles have appeared in several of our popular magazines under such sensational titles as “Creating a Mind,” which have led parents of mentally-deficient children to form extravagant conceptions of the powers of surgery in this direction. It may not, therefore, be inappropriate for medical men to weigh and measure the evidence which has accumulated during the last five years as to the possibilities and impossibilities of operative interference in these cases.


Author(s):  
Donal Harris

FRESH ON THE HEELS OF COMPILING FLAPPERS AND PHILOSOPHERS (1920), a short-story collection mostly culled from fiction previously published in the Saturday Evening Post, F. Scott Fitzgerald momentarily paused to imagine how popular magazines might occupy themselves when no one is reading them. The resulting short play, “This Is a Magazine,” published in ...


1938 ◽  
Vol 9 (7) ◽  
pp. 351-356
Author(s):  
Claude C. Bowman
Keyword(s):  

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