From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
This is a list of United States magazines .
Automotive
Business and finance
Industry
Finance
General
Children
Engineering
Electronic
Entertainment and art
Folklore
Food and cooking
Gay interest
General interest
Gossip
Health
Men
Women
General
History
Hobby and interest
Home and garden
Amateur radio
Animals and pets
Board games
Numismatics/Coin Collecting
Stamp collecting
Tabletop roleplaying games
Humor
Lifestyle
Literary
Men's interest
Music
News
Parenting
Pharmaceuticals and pharmacies
Politics
The American Conservative (right)
The American Interest
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)
Campaigns & Elections (non-partisan, 1980)
Commentary (neoconservative, 1945, 25,000)
Commonweal (liberal Catholic, founded 1924, 20,000)
Democracy (progressive/liberal, 2006, n/a)
First Things (Christian conservative, 1990, n/a)
Foreign Affairs (statist, 1922, 181,519)
Foreign Policy (1970, 101,054)
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)
The Imaginative Conservative (conservative, 2010, n/a)
In These Times (liberal, 1976, 20,000)
Jacobin (democratic socialist, 2011, 15,000)
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)
Monthly Review (socialist, 1949, 8,500)
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)
New York (liberal, 1968, 406,237)
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)
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 Examiner (conservative, 2005)
Washington Monthly (center-left, 1969, 18,000)
YaleGlobal Online (international, globalization and anti-globalization, 2002, n/a)
Z Magazine (left, 1987, 20,000)
Regional interest
Religion
Science and technology
1928 issue of
Popular Aviation (now published as Flying ), which became the largest aviation magazine with a circulation of 100,000 in 1929.
[2]
Science fiction and fantasy
Spanish language
Sports
Computing and electronics
Teen interest
Travel
Video games
Wildlife
Writing
Miscellaneous
See also
References
^
" 'Blender' Magazine: RIP" . Entertainment Weekly .
^
"Again, Mitchell" . Time Magazine . Time. June 10, 1929. Archived from
the original on May 21, 2013. Retrieved August 26, 2007 . "Monthly magazine until this month called Popular Aviation and Aeronautics . With 100,000 circulation it is largest-selling of U. S. air publications." "Editor of Aeronautics is equally airwise Harley W. Mitchell, no relative of General Mitchell."
Media of North America
Sovereign states Dependencies and other territories
https://www.theuniversalbreakthroughmag.com/