...
Uploaded without edits: 9/22/2021
Little magazines, often called "small magazines", are literary magazines that publish experimental and non-conformist writings of relatively unknown writers. They are usually noncommercial in their outlook. They are often very irregular in their publication. The earliest significant examples are the transcendentalist publication The Dial (1840–44), edited by Ralph Waldo Emerson and Margaret Fuller in Boston, and The Savoy (1896), edited by Arthur Symons in London, which had a revolt against the Victorian Materialism as its agenda. Little magazines played a significant role for the poets who shaped the avant-garde movements like Modernism and Post-modernism across the world in the twentieth century. The Little Magazine Movement originated in the fifties and the sixties in many Indian languages like Bengali, Tamil, Marathi, Hindi, Malayalam and Gujarati, as it did in the West, in the early part of the 20th century.
Delete this subject heading if the title is clearly NOT a little magazine. Not all Beat magazines are little magazines, nor are all little magazines part of the Beat Movement.
[noncommercial periodical of limited circulation,
usually dedicated to publishing experimental literature and art and/or unconventional social ideas and political theories].
Almost all titles are in magazine form, but some newspapers and other publications are included.
INITIAL PROCESSING – by ABR curator.
...