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Magazines published in Toronto, Ontario, Canada.
A-Z Business Listings :
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AbOUT
abOUT is a Toronto-based monthly magazine, serving the gay,
lesbian, bisexual and transgender communities of Southern Ontario, Western New
York and Montreal.
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Brick, A Literary Journal
Brick is a Canadian literary magazine published twice a
year out of Toronto, Ontario. The magazine publishes book reviews, poetry,
memoirs, fiction, essays and interviews with both Canadian and international
writers. It was founded in London, Ontario By Stan Dragland and Jean McKay in
1977 and was originally devoted to reviews of, especially, Canadian books. In
1985, the magazine was taken over by Linda Spalding and Michael Ondaatje who
gradually transformed it into a journal of literary non-fiction with an emphasis
on the personal essay. Among the many writers who have appeared in Brick are
Margaret Atwood, J. M. Coetzee, Marilynne Robinson, Alice Munro, Sharon Olds,
Margaret Avison, W.S. Merwin, Jonathan Lethem, Christian Bök, bp nichol, Barbara
Gowdy, Russell Banks, Ian McEwan, Michael Chabon, Mavis Gallant, Orhan Pamuk,
Virginia Woolf, Guy Maddin, Richard Ford, Jim Harrison, Robert Creeley and many
many others.
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Canada Free Press
Canada Free Press is a Canadian website, which publishes
conservative news stories, features, and editorials. It is published in Toronto.
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Canadian Living
Canadian Living is a monthly Canadian lifestyle magazine,
which publishes articles relating to food, fashion, crafts, and health and
family advice.
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Corporate Knights
Corporate Knights is a quarterly Canadian magazine
dedicated to the promotion of responsible business practices within Canada and
the advancement of social and environmental sustainability worldwide.
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Existere
Existere - Journal of Arts & Literature is a Canadian
magazine, that publishes twice a year at York University's Vanier College in
Toronto, Ontario, Canada. The magazine publishes literary work, poetry, short
stories, articles, book reviews, essays, interviews, art, photography, and more
from contributors around the world.
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fab (magazine)
fab is a Canadian magazine which targets the gay community.
The magazine publishes biweekly issues in Toronto, Ontario. It publishes
alternate weeks to the city's other biweekly gay publication, Xtra!. The
publication’s official spelling uses a lower-case F: fab.
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Fashion (magazine)
Fashion is a Canadian fashion magazine published by St.
Joseph Media. Established in 1977, it was formerly known as Toronto Life Fashion
magazine. It is currently based in Toronto (with satellite offices in Vancouver
and Montreal), publishes 10 issues a year and has a total readership of
1,982,000.
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Hart House Review
Hart House Review (HHR) is a Canadian literary magazine
managed by student members of Hart House at the University of Toronto and
published by Coach House Press. The magazine is best known for prose, poetry,
art, and photography contributed by emerging writers and artists in Canada.
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Literary Review of Canada
The Literary Review of Canada (or LRC) is a Canadian
magazine that publishes ten times a year. The magazine publishes essays and
reviews of books on political, cultural and social topics, as well as Canadian
poetry. In January 2008 the LRC started publishing reviews and essays online in
its "Online Originals" feature.
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Maclean's
Maclean's is a Canadian weekly news magazine, reporting on
Canadian issues such as politics, pop culture, and current events.
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Pound (magazine)
Pound is a Toronto-based hip-hop magazine that is
distributed for free across Canada. Founded in 1998 and beginning publication in
December 1999, Pound is published quarterly. As of July 2009, the magazine had
published 42 issues.
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Quill & Quire
Quill & Quire, a Canadian magazine about the book and
publishing industry, was launched in 1935 and has an average circulation of
5,000 copies per issue, but its publisher claims a readership of 25,000. Quill &
Quire reviews books and magazines and provides a forum for discussion of trends
in the publishing industry.
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Rue Morgue (magazine)
Rue Morgue is a Canadian magazine dedicated to covering
"horror in culture and entertainment," taking its name from Edgar Allan Poe's
short story "The Murders in the Rue Morgue." The magazine is based in Toronto,
Ontario, Canada. It was founded by its original editor-in-chief Rod Gudino in
1997. The magazine's current editor-in-chief, as of the December 2005 issue, is
Jovanka Vuckovic. The well known Rue Morgue logo was created by the magazine's
Art Director, Gary Pullin, and was first published on the cover of its seventh
issue.
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Ryerson Review of Journalism
The Ryerson Review of Journalism is a Canadian magazine,
published twice annually by final year journalism students at Ryerson
University. The magazine profiles personalities, issues and controversies in
Canadian media. In addition to the features in the printed magazine, weekly
online features and a daily blog are maintained by the staff of the Review. The
magazine's mandate has, from the very beginning, asked What does this mean for
Canadian journalism now?
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Shameless (magazine)
Shameless is a Canadian magazine with a feminist
perspective for girls. It is published three times a year. The magazine is run
by editor Megan Griffith-Greene and publisher Stacey May Fowles. The staff also
includes art director Sheila Sampath, features editor Kate Rae, reviews editor
Pike Krpan, web editor Cate Simpson and webmaster Wesley Fok.
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Spacing (magazine)
Spacing is a three-times-yearly magazine published in
Toronto. Focusing on issues affecting Toronto's public realm, Spacing was
originally published by the Toronto Public Space Committee in house until it was
spun off as a wholly independent magazine after the first issue. (The two
organizations support each other on occasion.)
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Taddle Creek (magazine)
Taddle Creek is a literary magazine based in Toronto,
Ontario, Canada. Published twice a year—in June and December—it showcases the
work of established and emerging authors/illustrators who live (primarily, but
not exclusively) in the Toronto area. A typical issue of Taddle Creek will
feature a mix of fiction, poetry, interviews, comics, essays, and photographs,
as well as Editor-in-Chief Conan Tobias's wry editorials on the often erratic
application of grammar and style in media, commerce, and everyday life.
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This Magazine
This Magazine is an independent alternative Canadian
political magazine. It was launched "by a gang of school activists" in 1966 as
This Magazine is About Schools, a journal covering political issues in the
education system. During its early years, its editorial offices were located
near the University of Toronto in space rented from Co-operative College
Residences Inc., which in the late 1960s spawned the experimental "free
university" Rochdale College. The educational philosophy of Rochdale College was
influenced by this association, and by several individuals who published in This
Magazine, especially Dennis Lee. This Magazine gradually expanded its focus to
include a wide variety of political, arts and cultural writing from a
progressive perspective.
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The Toronto Globalist
The Toronto Globalist (also referred to as "The Globalist")
is a current affairs and international relations magazine published entirely by
undergraduate students at the University of Toronto, in Toronto, Canada. It is
part of the Global21 network of nine undergraduate magazines at several other
universities around the globe.
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Toronto Life
Toronto Life is a monthly Canadian magazine about
entertainment, politics and life in Toronto, Ontario, Canada. Established in
1966, it currently has a total readership of 863,000 and is published by St.
Joseph Media, which also owns the tourism magazine Where Canada (published in
several large cities), Fashion, Wish, Wedding Bells, and several smaller
magazines. The current editor-in-chief is Sarah Fulford, who succeeded long-time
editor John Macfarlane.
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Ukula
UKULA Magazine was an independent arts and culture
quarterly founded in 2004, based in Toronto, Ontario, Canada. It was created by
co-founders Kevin Renton and Graeme Maclean, who first started out DJing under
the now well known UKULA moniker at the city's Andy Poolhall in 2002. Copies of
UKULA were to be found throughout the cities of Toronto, Montreal and New York.
Plans were underway to extend full distribution to include London and Edinburgh,
though limited distribution was available in these two cities.
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The Walrus
The Walrus is a Canadian general interest magazine which
publishes long form journalism on Canadian and international affairs, along with
fiction and poetry by Canadian writers. It launched in September 2003, as an
attempt to create a Canadian equivalent to American magazines such as Harper's,
The Atlantic Monthly or The New Yorker. The magazine's mandate is to "be a
Canadian general-interest magazine with an international outlook. We are
committed to publishing the best work by the best writers from Canada and
elsewhere on a wide range of topics for readers who are curious about the
world." The magazine's current editor is John Macfarlane (interim), and its art
director is Brian Morgan. The magazine won the 2006 National Magazine Award for
Magazine of the Year in Canada.
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