- General Introduction to The New Age, 1907-1922, by Robert Scholes
- New Art in The New Age: What Was Modern? (PDF), by Dawn Blizard
The New Age was a weekly magazine, printed in double columns, folio sized, and mostly in type sizes that varied from small to miniscule. A rather different journal had been appearing under that name when a group led by G. B. Shaw decided to provide some funding and asked A. R. Orage and his friend Holbrook Jackson to begin a “New Series” in the spring of 1907. From then on, volumes ran for six months, with pages numbered accordingly. Among the notable contributors were Katherine Mansfield, Ezra Pound, Beatrice Hastings, T. E. Hulme, Walter Sickert, Marmaduke Pickthall, and Herbert Read. The magazine played a central role in the debates over modernism and in the social and political issues of the day. The New Age continued for some years after Orage resigned, but is not of comparable interest.
Volume Introductions
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- The New Age, Volume 1 (May 2 to October 24, 1907): An Introduction, by Sean Latham
- The New Age, Volume 2 (October 31, 1907 to April 25, 1908): An Introduction, by Carol DeBoer-Langworthy
- The New Age, Volume 3 (May 2 to October 24th, 1908): An Introduction, by Erica Dillon
- The New Age, Volume 4 (October 29, 1908 to April 22, 1909): An Introduction, by Robert Scholes
- The New Age, Volume 5 (April 29 to October 28, 1909): An Introduction, by Robert Sullivan
- The New Age, Volume 6 (November 4, 1909 to April 28, 1910): An Introduction, by Sean Latham
- The New Age, Volume 7 (May 5 to October 27, 1910): An Introduction, by Mark Gaipa
- The New Age, Volume 8 (November 3, 1910 to April 27, 1911): An Introduction, by Lee Garver
- The New Age, Volume 9 (May 4 to October 26, 1911): An Introduction, by Robert Sullivan
- The New Age, Volume 10 (November 2, 1911 to April 25, 1912): An Introduction, by Renée Allen