Girish Mahajan (Editor)

Krasnaya Nov

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Frequency
  
Monthly

Final issue
  
Summer 1942

Language
  
First issue
  
June 1921

Based in
  
Circulation
  
15 thousand (1921)45 thousand (1942)

Krasnaya Nov (Russian: Красная новь, '"Red Virgin Soil"') was a Soviet monthly literary magazine.

History

Krasnaya Nov, the first Soviet "thick" literary magazine, was established in June 1921. In its first 7 years, under editor-in-chief Alexander Voronsky, it reached a circulation of 15,000 copies, publishing works of the leading Soviet authors, including Maxim Gorky, Vladimir Mayakovsky, and Sergey Yesenin, as well as essays on politics, economics, and science by authors like Lenin, Stepanov-Skvortsov, Bukharin, Frunze and Radek, among others. In 1927, Voronsky was condemned as a Trotskist and fired. He was replaced first by Vladimir Vasilyevsky (summer 1927 – Spring 1929), then by Fyodor Raskolnikov (1929–1930), Ivan Bespalov (1930–1931), and Alexander Fadeyev (1931–1942), the latter bringing the circulation figures up to 45,000. In late 1941 the magazine was evacuated and in 1942 it closed for good.

References

Krasnaya Nov Wikipedia


Similar Topics