Edited by Robert Graves sporadically, this little magazine published a lot of good poetry by Georgian poets and younger writers. The third issue, of November 1923, appears as The Winter Owl.

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Edited by J. M. Murry, this little magazine stressed rhythm as the key to modernism and was especially strong in visual art. Rhythm was succeeded by The Blue Review

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Edited by Wyndham Lewis for two issues, this was a successor to Blast — still interesting but a bit tamer.

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Published annually, with six issues appearing in the years from 1916 to 1921, this anthology of modernist poetry was dominated by the Sitwell siblings.

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Founded in 1919 by Oxford University law student Chaman Lall, this quarterly review emphasized avant-garde poetry until its conclusion with a double issue in 1921.

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Edited by A. R. Orage, this weekly review presented crucial debates over the kind of art, literature, and politics best suited for modernity.

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Ladies’ Realm was a magazine for the “New Woman” published in London from 1896 to 1914 or 1915. It featured literature and social commentary from major writers of the period. This single issue is presented as part of the 1910 Collection, a group of 24 magazines published “on or about December 1910,” when, according to Virginia Woolf, “human character changed” and modernity became palpable.

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The Strand was a major organ for fiction in London from 1891 to 1950. This single issue is presented as part of the 1910 Collection, a group of 24 magazines published “on or about December 1910,” when, according to Virginia Woolf, “human character changed” and modernity became palpable.

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Windsor Magazine was an illustrated monthly in London between 1895-1939. This single issue is presented as part of the 1910 Collection, a group of 24 magazines published “on or about December 1910,” when, according to Virginia Woolf, “human character changed” and modernity became palpable.

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Blast is the quintessential modernist little magazine. Founded by Wyndham Lewis with the assistance of Ezra Pound, it was the organ for the Vorticist movement in London, running for just two issues in 1914 and 1915. The First World War killed it—along with some of its key contributors.

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