Magazines in a Democratic Society

Printed Page 119

In earlier days of the industry, individual magazines had a powerful national voice and united separate communities around important political and social issues such as abolition and suffrage. Muckrackers promoted social reform in the pages of general-interest magazines. Today, with so many specialized magazines appealing to ever-narrower groups of consumers, magazines no longer foster such a strong sense of national identity.

Table 6.3: TABLE 4.2 // MAJOR MAGAZINE CHAINS
Selected magazine titles for each major chain.
Advance Publications (Staten Island, N.Y.)
Allure Glamour Teen Vogue
Architectural Digest GQ Vanity Fair
Bon Appétit Lucky Vogue
Brides New Yorker W
Condé Nast Traveler Parade Wired
Details Self
Hearst Corporation (New York, N.Y.)
Car and Driver Good Housekeeping Redbook
Cosmopolitan Harper’s Bazaar Road & Track
Country Living House Beautiful Seventeen
Elle Marie Claire Town & Country
Elle Decor O, The Oprah Magazine Woman’s Day
Esquire Popular Mechanics
Meredith Corporation (Des Moines, Ia.)
American Baby Fitness Ready Made
Better Homes and Gardens Ladies’ Home Journal Scrapbooks
Family Circle Parents Successful Farming
Time Inc., A Subsidiary of Time Warner (New York, N.Y.)
Cooking Light InStyle Sports Illustrated
Entertainment Weekly Money Sports Illustrated for Kids
Essence People Sunset
FORTUNE Real Simple This Old House
Health Southern Living

Source: Advance.net, Hearst.com, meredith.com, TimeInc.com, accessed January 2012.

To be sure, contemporary commercial magazines still provide essential information about politics, society, and culture. Thus they help us to form opinions about the big issues of the day and to make decisions—key activities in any democracy. However, owing to their increasing dependence on advertising revenue, some publications view their readers as consumers first (viewers of displayed products and purchasers of material goods) and citizens second. To keep advertising dollars flowing in, editorial staffs may decide to keep controversial content out of their magazine’s pages—which constrains debate and thus hurts the democratic process.

At the same time, magazines have arguably had more freedom than other media to encourage and participate in democratic debate. More magazines circulate in the marketplace than do broadcast or cable television channels. And many new magazines are uniting dispersed groups of readers by, for example, giving cultural minorities or newly arrived immigrants a sense of membership in a broader community.

In addition, because magazines are distributed weekly, monthly, or bimonthly, they are less restricted by deadline pressure than are newspaper publishers and radio and television broadcasters. Journalists writing for magazines can thus take time to offer more rigorous and thoughtful analyses of the topics they cover. The biweekly Rolling Stone, for example, often mounts more detailed, comprehensive political pieces than you might find in a daily news source.

Amid today’s swirl of images, magazines and their advertisements certainly contribute to the commotion. But good magazines—especially those offering carefully researched, thoughtful, or entertaining articles and photos—have continued to inspire lively discussion among readers. And if they’re also well designed, they maintain readers’ connection to words—no small feat in today’s increasingly image-driven world.