Monthly Review
From Freepedia
The Monthly Review is a socialist magazine published in New York City. It appears 11 times per year. Image:Monthly review Dec 1988.jpg
The first issue of the Monthly Review appeared in May 1949 as the United States was beginning its drive toward the Cold War. It featured the lead article Why Socialism? by Albert Einstein. During the McCarthy era of the early 1950s, its original editors Paul Sweezy and Leo Huberman were targeted as Communist agents, but they managed to keep their jobs.
Since its inception, the Monthly Review has been a consistent and outspoken voice for socialism and against what they call American imperialism. The editors of Monthly Review are prominent Marxists, but are independent, not aligned with a particular existing revolutionary movement (although they were early admirers of the Cuban Revolution). In the pages of the Monthly Review, Marxism is not a political party but a philosophy; a looking-glass with which to view society. Its articles tend to be written mostly by academics — and researched and referenced as such — but are free of academic jargon.
Founding editor Paul Sweezy has said the mission of the Review "is to see the present as history." The magazine enjoys a steady readership and is more influential outside the U.S. than inside it.
The Monthly Review Press, an allied endeavor, has published many political books, such as Fanshen by William Hinton, Labour and Monopoly Capital by Harry Braverman, The Development of Underdevelopment by Andre Gunder Frank, Unequal Development by Samir Amin and the English translation of The Open Veins of Latin America, by Eduardo Galeano.
Editors
Monthly Review has had just six editors in its entire history, two of whom are currently still involved:
- Paul Sweezy, from 1949 to his death in 2004
- Leo Huberman from 1949 to his death in 1968
- Harry Magdoff from 1969 to the present
- Ellen Meiksins Wood, 1997-2000
- Robert McChesney, 2000-2004
- John Bellamy Foster, May 2000 to the present



