Kalpana Kalpana (Editor)

Tomorrow (magazine)

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

Tomorrow has been the name of several magazines.

Contents

To-Morrow, rational magazine (Chicago, 1903–1909)

To-Morrow magazine was founded 1903 as the Bulletin of the Morris Society, Chicago and changed its name to To-Morrow - A Monthly Handbook of the Changing Order in 1905. Two months after the name change the editor became Parker H. Sercombe who advertised as A Rational Monthly Magazine. The Society had no direct connection with the William Morris Society (founded 1955, England).

Tomorrow, left-wing magazine (New Zealand, 1934–1940)

Tomorrow was a left-wing magazine edited by Kennaway Henderson 1934-1940 See Tomorrow Letterhead and A Popular Vision by Rachel Barrowman.

Tomorrow, mystical magazine (New York, 1942–1962)

Tomorrow was an American magazine, published by Creative Age Press, published from 1942-1962. It specialized in parapsychology and mystical subjects. The magazine also contained a fair amount of literary contributions as well as articles on current events. For example, the March 1943 issue (Volume 2, No. 7) focused on Latin American authors, and featured a lengthy poem by Pablo Neruda: The Seventh of November. In the same issue, American Educator and author John Erskine contributed an article on The People's Theatre. The editor Eileen J. Garrett, was one of America's best known mediums. Associate editors included Mercedes de Acosta. In a 1963 issue, Frithjof Schuon contributed an article on "Some Notes on the Shamanism of North America", and in 1964 he wrote "Reflections on Ideological Sentimentalism".

Tomorrow magazines today

There are or have been several local publications with the title Tomorrow

  • Tomorrow, Minnesota SU. Annual report. Spring 2009 online.
  • Tomorrow Magazine, Gulf Coast Institute, Houston, 2006-2007 online.
  • Tomorrow, a "one-shot magazine about creative destruction" created by several editors of Good Worldwide after being fired en masse in 2012.
  • References

    Tomorrow (magazine) Wikipedia