Masses & Mainstream
Masses & Mainstream (1948-1963) was an American Marxist monthly publication headquartered in New York City. The magazine resulted from a merger between New Masses, which ceased publication in January 1948, and Mainstream, a Communist cultural quarterly established in 1947.[1]
Masses & Mainstream was edited by Samuel Sillen. On the board of editors were critics, writers and scholars including Sidney Finkelstein, W.E.B. Du Bois, Mike Gold, Herbert Aptheker, Phillip Bonosky, Lloyd L. Brown, Annette Rubinstein, and John Howard Lawson. Paul Robeson was always on the masthead.[2] Although many of the magazine's best-known contributors had written for New Masses before World War II, Masses & Mainstream also provided a platform for younger writers such as Howard Fast, Thomas McGrath, Eve Merriam, Jesús Colón, and Lorraine Hansberry.[1][3]
The magazine had a circulation of 17,000 in 1948, but steadily lost subscribers during the McCarthy era.[1] Masses & Mainstream shut down in 1956. It then became an offshoot publication entitled Mainstream which lasted until 1963.[4]
In addition to its monthly magazine, Masses & Mainstream published a small number of pamphlets and books, including:[5]
- Howard Fast, Intellectuals in the Fight for Peace (1949)
- Samuel Sillen, Cold War in the Classroom (1950)
- V. J. Jerome, The Negro in Hollywood Films (1950)
- Pablo Neruda, Let the Rail Splitter Awake and Other Poems (1950)
- W.E.B. Du Bois, I Take My Stand for Peace (1951)
- Herbert Aptheker, America's Racist Laws, Weapon of National Oppression (1951)
- Lloyd L. Brown, Iron City (1951)
- Steve Nelson, The Volunteers (1953)
- John Howard Lawson, Film in the Battle of Ideas (1953)
- Virginia Gardner, The Rosenberg Story (1954)
- Steve Nelson, The 13th Juror: The Inside Story of My Trial (1955)
- Samuel Sillen, Women against Slavery (1955)
References
[edit]- ^ a b c Benoît Tadié (2012). "The Masses Speak". In Brooker, Peter; Thacker, Andrew (eds.). The Oxford Critical and Cultural History of Modernist Magazines. Vol. II: North America 1894-1960. Oxford University Press. pp. 851–854. ISBN 978-0-19-954581-0.
- ^ Rosenberg, Daniel (12 January 2018). "Sidney Finkelstein: an appreciation of the great Marxist cultural critic". Culture Matters.
- ^ "(Lorraine Hansberry) Masses & Mainstream Volume 3, Number 9 (1950) Magazine". WalterFilm. 16 June 2024.
- ^ Goodman, Marty (February 2020). "Introduction to the New Masses digital archive" (PDF). Marxists Internet Archive.
- ^ "Search results for Masses & Mainstream". Bibliomania. Retrieved 16 September 2024.
- Communist periodicals published in the United States
- Monthly magazines published in the United States
- Defunct political magazines published in the United States
- Defunct literary magazines published in the United States
- Magazines established in 1948
- Magazines disestablished in 1963
- Defunct Marxist magazines
- Defunct magazines published in New York City
- Literary magazines published in the United States stubs