The New Journal
Appearance
Categories | Student publication |
---|---|
Frequency | Five per year |
Founder | Daniel Yergin and Peter Yeager |
Founded | 1967 |
Company | The New Journal at Yale, Inc. |
Country | United States |
Based in | New Haven, Connecticut |
Language | English |
Website | www |
ISSN | 0028-6001 |
The New Journal is a magazine at Yale University that publishes creative nonfiction about Yale and New Haven. Inspired by New Journalism writers like Tom Wolfe and Gay Talese, the student-run publication was established by Daniel Yergin and Peter Yeager in 1967 to publish investigative pieces and in-depth interviews.[1][2] It publishes five issues per year.[3] The magazine is distributed free of charge at Yale and in New Haven and was among the first university publications not to charge a subscription fee.[1][4]
Notable alumni
[edit]- Anne Applebaum, Pulitzer Prize winner for Gulag: A History, staff writer for The Atlantic
- James Bennet, former editor-in-chief of The Atlantic
- Emily Bazelon, staff writer for The New York Times Magazine, former senior editor for Slate, and senior research fellow at Yale Law School
- Richard Bradley, editor of Worth magazine
- Jay Carney, White House press secretary under Barack Obama
- Richard Conniff, writer of books, articles, and television screenplays about nature; winner of the 1997 National Magazine Award and a 2007 Guggenheim Fellowship
- Roger Cohn, former editor-in-chief of Mother Jones
- Elisha Cooper, American writer and children's book author
- Andy Court, producer, 60 Minutes
- Cassie da Costa, staff writer at Vanity Fair
- David Dunlap, reporter for The New York Times
- Dana Goodyear, staff writer at The New Yorker and co-founder of Figment
- Paul Goldberger, Pulitzer Prize-winning architectural critic and Contributing Editor for Vanity Fair
- Darren Gersh, Washington, D.C. bureau chief for Nightly Business Report
- Charlotte Howard, New York Bureau Chief and Energy and Commodities Editor for The Economist
- Tom Isler, documentary filmmaker
- Anya Kamenetz, writer, Fast Company; author, DIY U and Generation Debt
- Ellen Katz, law professor at the University of Michigan Law School
- Stuart Klawans, film critic for The Nation
- Brendan Koerner, contributing editor at Wired magazine
- Elizabeth Kolbert, Pulitzer Prize winner for The Sixth Extinction: An Unnatural History, staff writer at The New Yorker
- Lawrence Lasker, screenwriter and producer, nominated for an Academy Award in 1983 for WarGames
- Sarah Laskow, senior editor at The Atlantic
- Samantha Power, Pulitzer Prize winner for A Problem from Hell: America and the Age of Genocide, 28th United States Ambassador to the United Nations
- Motoko Rich, Tokyo Bureau Chief for The New York Times
- Sanjena Sathian, novelist; author, Gold Diggers
- Hampton Sides, journalist and historian; editor-at-large of Outside magazine; author, Hellhound on His Trail, Ghost Soldiers, Blood and Thunder
- Gabriel Snyder, former editor-in-chief of The New Republic
- John Swansburg, deputy editor for Slate
- Jessica Winter, business and technology editor for Slate
- Ben Smith, media columnist at The New York Times, founding editor-in-chief of BuzzFeed News[5]
References
[edit]- ^ a b "Money Problems Stop New Journal". 11 February 1972. Retrieved 23 February 2014.
- ^ "IHS Experts". IHS. Retrieved 31 March 2012.
- ^ "About". The New Journal. 13 November 2009. Retrieved 31 March 2012.
- ^ "About". The New Journal. 13 November 2009. Retrieved 31 March 2012.
- ^ reginaender (2016-02-03). "BuzzFeed editor-in-chief establishes site's credibility". APU Public Affairs Journalism. Retrieved 2019-12-07.
External links
[edit]- Official website
- "Yale's New Journal," published in The Crimson, December 2, 1967