Monthly Magazine

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Monthly Magazine, 1810 (John Adams Library, Boston Public Library)

The Monthly Magazine (1796–1843) of London[1][2] began publication in February 1796.

Contributors

Charles Lamb,[3] and James Hogg.[5] The magazine also published the earliest fiction by Charles Dickens, the first of what would become Sketches by Boz.[6]

The circulation of the magazine in early 1830s was about 600.[6] From 1839 the magazine was for two years edited by Francis Foster Barham and John Abraham Heraud. Its content in that period has been described by a recent American analyst as "popularizations of post-Kantian philosophy, esoteric mystical commentary, literary effusions, and idealistic calls for child-centered education and communitarian socialism."[7]

See also

References

  1. ^ "ESTC - Search Results". estc.bl.uk.
  2. ^ New Cambridge Bibliography of English Literature, v.2. Cambridge University Press, 1971
  3. ^ a b Arthur Sherbo. From the "Monthly Magazine, and British Register": Notes on Milton, Pope, Boyce, Johnson, Sterne, Hawkesworth, and Prior. Studies in Bibliography, Vol. 43 (1990).
  4. Houghton Mifflin
    , 1912.
  5. ^ a b Christies Retrieved 9 August 2018.
  6. . Retrieved 2 April 2013.

Further reading

Media related to Monthly Magazine (London: 1796-1843) at Wikimedia Commons