ABSTRACT

The media and more recently journalism have provided rich areas of study for many years but magazines, perhaps the most prolific single medium, have been largely ignored. Mapping The Magazine aims to redress the balance with an unprecedented collection of original, scholarly, detailed but wide-ranging examinations of the magazine form. Drawing on a variety of theoretical approaches and a wealth of titles from around the world, the contributions demonstrate just how significant the magazine has been, and continues to be, in the realm of journalism and cultural production.

From the science magazines of the Victorian era to women’s magazines of South Africa and Israel, via rock music and photojournalism past and present, the material in Mapping The Magazine illuminates and explores the all-encompassing, global and historical nature of the subject matter.

Some of the most notable names in the field of magazine studies, including John Hartley, Sammye Johnson, David Abrahamson, Bethan Benwell, and Patrick Roessler contribute research based analyses of various aspects of magazine journalism from around the globe and across a wide historical span.

This book will help to establish the magazine as a medium which is not only suitable for research but which also opens up a huge new field of possibilities.

This book was previously published as a special issue of Journalism Studies

chapter |7 pages

Why Should They Care?

The relationship of academic scholarship to the magazine industry

chapter |11 pages

New Sexism?

Readers' responses to the use of irony in men's magazines

chapter |5 pages

Before Cosmopolitan

The Girl in German women's magazines in the 1920s 1

chapter |11 pages

Documenting Kate Moss

Fashion photography and the persistence of photojournalism

chapter |18 pages

Global Players, ÉMigrés, and Zeitgeist

Magazine design and the interrelation between the United States and Germany

chapter |11 pages

Johannesburg Lunch-Hour 1951–1963

The emergence and development of the humanist photographic essay in Drum magazine

chapter |18 pages

Consumer Magazines in South Africa and Israel

Toward a socio-semiotic approach to magazine research

chapter |8 pages

Customer Magazines

The rise of “glossies” as brand extensions

chapter |14 pages

“Everything Louder Than Everything Else”

The contemporary metal music magazine and its cultural appeal

chapter |11 pages

Nineteenth-Century Popular Science Magazines

Narrative, and the problem of historical materiality

chapter |4 pages

Magazine Exceptionalism

The concept, the criteria, the challenge