ABSTRACT

The Telosscope blog now creates more interaction between journal and audience. Readers can become writers as they post comments (reactions) to the blog posts written by Telos contributors. The journal digitized may also now be able to cross into other fields that it previously was excluded from, perhaps simply because it was unknown to them. The journals new on-line subtitle lends credence to this idea, calling itself now, a quarterly journal of politics, philosophy, critical theory, culture, and the arts, as opposed to its earlier subtitles such as a marxist quarterly, a journal of revolutionary thought, or a journal of radical thought. The web presence and social networking could also be an effort to reach out to a younger generation as the journals original founders and contributors reach their sixties and seventies. Without younger readers and contributors, the journal would eventually age out and fade away.