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to counter its effect in 1913, and this, combined with the growing distance between Orage and the mainstream left, reduced its influence. By then, the editorial line supported
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The journal appeared weekly, and featured a wide cross-section of writers with an interest in literature and the arts, but also politics, spiritualism and economics.
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115:. Jackson acted as co-editor only for the first year, after which Orage edited it alone until he sold it in 1922. By that time his interests had moved towards
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did publish opposing viewpoints and arguments, even on issues upon which Orage had strong opinions. Topics covered in detail included:
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helped to shape modernism in literature and the arts from 1907 to 1922". It ceased publication in 1938. Orage was also associated with
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in the visual arts, literature and music, and consistently observed, reviewed and contributed to the activities of the movement.
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The magazine began as a journal of
Christian liberalism and socialism. Orage and Jackson re-oriented it to promote the ideas of
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275:, its mixture of culture, politics, Nietzschean philosophy and spiritualism, and its non-standard appearance,
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685:. PDFs of all 783 weekly issues (and 42 supplements) may be downloaded for free at the MJP website.
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On this last point, the editorial line moved from initial support to bitter opposition by 1912. As
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has been cited as the
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Finlay, J. L (1969). "Clues to Social Credit: Orage and The New Age".
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the need for a socialist party (as distinct from the newly formed
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Modernist
Journals Project Has Grant to Digitize Rare Magazines
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With its woodprint illustrations reminiscent of artwork by the
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The journal became one of the first places in
England in which
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also concerned itself with the definition and development of
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Defunct
Christian magazines published in the United Kingdom
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Defunct political magazines published in the United
Kingdom
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Defunct literary magazines published in the United
Kingdom
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was a
British weekly magazine (1894–1938), inspired by
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movement, but in 1907, as a radical weekly edited by
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moved away from Fabian politics, the leaders of the
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588:at the gateway page for the MJP's digital edition
573:: Brown University press release (April 19, 2007)
111:, took over the journal with financial help from
744:Weekly magazines published in the United Kingdom
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542:Modernism In and Beyond the “Little Magazines”
704:1938 disestablishments in the United Kingdom
558:in Encyclopædia Britannica article on Orage
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729:Magazines established in 1894
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683:Modernist Journals Project
483:Kaikhosru Shapurji Sorabji
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458:Herman George Scheffauer
32:New Age (disambiguation)
601:The New Age Under Orage
165:– in a debate between
126:The New English Weekly
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651:Orage and the New Age
649:Taylor, Gary (2000).
584:Short description of
307:(Dikran Kouyoumdjian)
273:German Expressionists
78:G. K. Chesterton
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675:Complete archive of
463:Hugh Pembroke Vowles
423:Dimitrije Mitrinovic
289:Notable contributors
227:among others. After
208:founded the journal
149:and later a form of
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30:For other uses, see
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448:Marmaduke Pickthall
418:Katherine Mansfield
113:George Bernard Shaw
97:Christian socialist
66:George Bernard Shaw
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18:New Age (magazine)
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413:Ramiro de Maeztu
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386:Holbrook Jackson
331:G. K. Chesterton
326:Cecil Chesterton
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187:women's suffrage
171:G. K. Chesterton
163:private property
147:Fabian socialism
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678:The New Age
603:(chapter 2)
586:The New Age
556:The New Age
468:H. G. Wells
443:A. J. Penty
376:T. E. Hulme
311:Belfort Bax
300:Boris Anrep
277:The New Age
243:The New Age
229:World War I
206:Sydney Webb
194:The New Age
167:H. G. Wells
155:The New Age
121:The New Age
93:The New Age
53:The New Age
45:The New Age
693:Categories
660:0863399029
507:References
453:Ezra Pound
428:Edwin Muir
391:Oscar Levy
351:David Eder
264:Production
258:David Eder
235:theory of
642:0021-9495
366:Eric Gill
282:Der Sturm
247:modernism
143:Nietzsche
117:mysticism
202:Beatrice
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137:Content
88:History
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153:. But
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