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Reference
>
Cambridge History
>
Later National Literature, Part II
>
Later Magazines
>
Scribners Magazine
Scribners Monthly; The Century Magazine
Putnams Monthly Magazine and Its Successors
CONTENTS
·
VOLUME CONTENTS
·
INDEX OF ALL CHAPTERS
·
BIBLIOGRAPHIC RECORD
The Cambridge History of English and American Literature in 18 Volumes
(190721).
VOLUME XVII. Later National Literature, Part II.
XIX.
Later Magazines
.
§ 11.
Scribners Magazine
.
Scribners Magazine
(always to be distinguished from
Scribners Monthly
), published by Charles Scribners Sons and edited continuously until 1914 by Edward L. Burlingame, first appeared in January, 1887. Like
Harpers Magazine
it is closely associated with a great publishing house, but unlike
Harpers
in the early years it was never a mere tender to the business. Though announced by a rather conventional prospectus it began auspiciously. Among the earliest contributors were William James, Robert Louis Stevenson, Sarah Orne Jewett, Thomas Nelson Page, Elizabeth Akers, H. C. Bunner, Andrew Lang, Austin Dobson, Charles Edwin Markham, Edith Thomas, Percival Lowell, A. S. Hill, and Thomas A. Janvier; and it has since kept up the high quality and the diversity of material suggested by these names. Like its chief rivals it maintains an English edition.
24
It is not easy to characterize the distinctions between
Harpers Magazine,
the
Century
and
Scribners Magazine
as these have existed for the last thirty years. The long editorships of Alden, Gilder, and Burlingame tended, fortunately, to produce stability and to develop an individuality of tone in the periodicals with which these men were respectively associated. The difference is, however, one of tone merely, and is too subtle to be readily analyzed or phrased. As has been said, the
Century
is distinguished by special attention to history and timely articles, but in fiction, verse, and general essays they are much the same. None has been supported by a clique, party, or school. Most of the greater American writers of the last generation have contributed to at least two, many to all three of these magazines. None of them has had a monopoly of the work of any distinctive and distinguished writer as the
Knickerbocker
had a monopoly of Irving and the
Atlantic
had a monopoly of, for example, Holmes.
25
Before the middle of the nineteenth century the better magazines had mostly refrained from illustrations, except, perhaps, occasional full-page inserted plates. It was for
Harpers Magazine
and
Scribners Monthly
to show that pictures in the text were not incompatible with literary dignity and excellence; and they did this by securing the best available literary material, and developing illustrations that were not unworthy to accompany it. In so doing they indirectly and unconsciously helped to prepare the way for the cheaper magazines which sprang into such prominence a few years later.
26
CONTENTS
·
VOLUME CONTENTS
·
INDEX OF ALL CHAPTERS
·
BIBLIOGRAPHIC RECORD
Scribners Monthly; The Century Magazine
Putnams Monthly Magazine and Its Successors
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