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The Chicagoan: A Lost Magazine of the Jazz Age [Hardcover]

Neil Harris (Author), Teri J. Edelstein (Collaborator)
4.9 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (7 customer reviews)

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Book Description

November 3, 2008
While browsing the stacks of the Regenstein Library at the University of Chicago some years ago, noted historian Neil Harris made a surprising discovery: a group of nine plainly bound volumes whose unassuming spines bore the name the Chicagoan.  Pulling one down and leafing through its pages, Harris was startled to find it brimming with striking covers, fanciful art, witty cartoons, profiles of local personalities, and a whole range of incisive articles.  He quickly realized that he had stumbled upon a Chicago counterpart to the New Yorker that mysteriously had slipped through the cracks of history and memory.
 
Here Harris brings this lost magazine of the Jazz Age back to life. In its own words, the Chicagoan claimed to represent “a cultural, civilized, and vibrant” city “which needs make no obeisance to Park Avenue, Mayfair, or the Champs Elysees.” Urbane in aspiration and first published just sixteen months after the 1925 appearance of the New Yorker, it sought passionately to redeem the Windy City’s unhappy reputation for organized crime, political mayhem, and industrial squalor by demonstrating the presence of style and sophistication in the Midwest.  Harris’s substantial introductory essay here sets the stage, exploring the ambitions, tastes, and prejudices of Chicagoans during the 1920s and 30s.  The author then lets the Chicagoan speak for itself in lavish full-color segments that reproduce its many elements: from covers, cartoons, and editorials to reviews, features—and even one issue reprinted in its entirety.
 
Recalling a vivid moment in the life of the Windy City, the Chicagoan is a forgotten treasure, offered here for a whole new age to enjoy.
 
(20080401)

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Editorial Reviews

From The New Yorker

From 1926 to 1935, a group of Midwestern writers, editors, and artists published a magazine strikingly similar to this one. The Chicagoan ran profiles, reviews, and editorials, interspersed with cartoons, and presented breezy dispatches on local events in a section that no one seemed embarrassed to call �Talk of the Town.� This volume, subtitled �A Lost Magazine of the Jazz Age,� offers a sample of the contents, including one entire issue, and has an excellent introductory essay on the magazine�s chaotic history. The publication�s art work was strong, but its writing lacked the consistency of tone that might have lent the project coherence. Many authors seem to have been beset by second-city syndrome, and the most entertaining bits today are those in which they spoof their own anxieties about Chicago�s rough-and-tumble reputation. In one cartoon, a pet-store owner tries to sell an older woman a parrot formerly owned by a local d�butante. The customer�s response? �But I already have a parrot that swears.�
Copyright ©2008 Click here to subscribe to The New Yorker

Review

“How attractive to have this lively and short-lived magazine made accessible and brilliantly contextualized by Neil Harris. Harris is the ideal scholar to explain how the Chicagoan helped to define the city during this era, setting Prohibition and gangland notoriety in counterpoint to stylish innovations in music, art, and architecture. This handsome volume is invaluable to those intrigued by the growth of urban identity and self-awareness during the second quarter of the twentieth century. Although the word ‘lifestyle’ did not appear in a dictionary until 1961, The Chicagoan: A Lost Magazine of the Jazz Age demonstrates just how curious Americans were about matters of lifestyle more than a generation earlier.”—Michael Kammen, Cornell University
                                                                                   
(Michael Kammen 20081101)

“Founded in the 1920’s, the New Yorker for almost a century has been one of the most vibrant and important magazines in America. Little did most of us know, however, that a similar periodical began at almost the same time and seemed to offer the same intellectual liveliness and cultural excitement of its East Coast counterpart. Neil Harris has recaptured the spirit and story of the Chicagoan in this fresh and colorful book.”—Kenneth Jackson, Jacques Barzun Professor of History and the Social Sciences, Columbia University
(Kenneth Jackson 20081025)

“Witty, artsy, and slightly snooty . . . . Despite [the editors’] frequent protests that [their] city was better than its Al Capone image, the magazine chronicled the doings of Scarface as often as it reviewed opera at Ravinia.”—Robert Loerzel, Chicago Magazine
(Robert Loerzel Chicago magazine 20081110)

“It gleams. It glitters. It practically shouts, ‘Sophistication!’ except for the fact that the truly sophisticated never shout. A silky murmur will do. It was called The Chicagoan, and from 1926 to 1935 . . . it graced the coffee tables and guided the cultural choices of the city’s elite. It was a magazine, but it was more than that, too: It was a mindset. An attitude. A lofty perspective on the passing show. Thanks to the archival detective work of Neil Harris, emeritus professor at the University of Chicago, we can glide our way back to an era when elegance mattered—not only in dress and deportment, but also in sentence and image. In The Chicagoan: A Lost Magazine of the Jazz Age . . . a hefty, gorgeous hunk of a book that reproduces one entire issue as well as 149 covers and many articles, a vanished era returns. It comes back in all of its fussy glory, its daffy humor, its gentle insistence that even a city best known for gangsters and stockyards could yearn for beauty and glamour.—Julia Keller, Chicago Tribune

(Julia Keller Chicago Tribune 20081109)

“From 1926 to 1935, a group of Midwestern writers, editors, and artists published a magazine strikingly similar to this one. The Chicagoan ran profiles, reviews, and editorials, interspersed with cartoons, and presented breezy dispatches on local events in a section that no one seemed embarrassed to call ‘Talk of the Town.’”—The New Yorker
(New Yorker 20081112)

“Before the advent of microfiche and electronic records, many smaller-circulation periodicals were inevitably lost to trash heaps and poor preservation methods. The Chicagoan, a colorful Midwestern magazine that was published from 1926 to 1935, was luckily saved from this oblivion by the historian Neil Harris. . . . He has since compiled the periodical’s greatest hits into th[is] beautiful and vibrant book.”—Wall Street Journal Magazine
(WSJ Magazine 20081123)

“A nine-year wonder. . . . As demonstrated by this elegant collection of covers, illustrations, and stories from the Chicagoan, in its heyday Chicago was the most stylish, exciting and quintessentially American of all the cities that encircle the United States. The Chicagoan lasted only nine years, but they were well chosen, from 1926 to 1935, straddling prohibition, the depression and the jazz age. Although deliberately aping the New Yorker, founded a year earlier, its cover design was entirely its own, a cocktail of art-deco design, slabby poster colours and mordant wit. The sinuous illustrations cascading across the inside pages made it visually far superior to the original . . . . Perhaps it was too beautiful to survive.”—Andro Linklater, Spectator

(Andro Linklator Spectator 20081120)

“Somehow this vibrant magazine was completely forgotten until a few years ago, when the distinguished cultural historian Neil Harris came upon a set of the magazine’s run in the library of the University of Chicago. It has now been brought back into print, if not to life, by the University of Chicago Press. What a marvelous job they have done! This is a book you will want to own, a coffee-table book nicer and better than most coffee tables. The University of Chicago Press has swung for the fences, producing the book to the highest standards—a nearly 400-page oversize volume, designed with care and attentiveness, to period detail and featuring loads of full-color images. It’s a pleasure to see the ball sail into the bleachers. . . .Thanks to Neil Harris’s serendipitous discovery and the University of Chicago Press’s superb effort, The Chicagoan takes its rightful place on the top shelf.”—Matt Weiland, New York Times Book Review

(Matt Wieland The New York Times Book Review 20081124)

“A wonderful and lavish book. . . . well-reproduced and  well-illustrated. The only thing that could top this would be a Nelson Algren renaissance. —Robert Birnbaum, themorningnews.com

(Robert Birnbaum themorningnews.com 20081210)

“Reading the dusty old mag in this beautiful new book made us nostalgic for an urban culture that we never got to experience. The Chicagoan was civically engaged in a way publications nowadays rarely are. No compunction exists about taking shots at politicians, making hay about the naming of the Art Institute lions, or moaning about the difficulty of hailing a cab on Michigan Avenue. Though we hardly knew ye, Chicagoan, you’re suddenly sorely missed.”—Jonathan Messinger, Time Out Chicago

(Jonathan Messinger Time Out Chicago 20081211)

“A testament to serendipity. . . . Harris does a wonderful job of situating the magazine in the urban cacophony of 1920s Chicago, a city at the height of its power.”—Evan R. Goldstein, The Chronicle Review

(Evan R. Goldstein Chronicle Review 20090227)

“The product of [Neil] Harris’ years of thorough and thoughtful research, now fashioned into a fantastically hefty volume, a treasure-trove of our city’s cultural history. . . . There were no stars at The Chicagoan. The Second City’s scrappy reputation held firm with the magazine’s hodgepodge of artists, journalists and academics who filled its pages twice a month (once a month in later years). They remain largely unknown, to this day, though Harris gives them their due, both in his eloquent historical analysis and in an appendix at the end of the book.”—Teresa Budasi, Chicago Sun-Times

(Teresa Budasi Chicago Sun-Times 20090722)

“Entrepreneurs and journalists dreaming of the next great Chicago magazine will find the Chicagoan compelling, the writing interesting, the mere fact of its existence perhaps providing succor.”—Micah Maidenburg, Chicago Journal  

(Micah Maidenberg Chicago Journal )

“Social and cultural scholars will find [The Chicagoan] a joy, but this primarily pictorial book, with its witty textual nuggets and stylized Art Deco illustrations, will appeal to a nonacademic audience as well. . . . Highly recommended [for] all library collections.”—F.J. Augustyn Jr., CHOICE

(CHOICE )

2009 Choice Outstanding Academic Title
(Choice )

"Harris''s work ably reinstates the Chicagoan and joins the essential literature on the cultural history of Chicago and the graphic art of the period."
(Wendy Greenhouse CAA Review )

Product Details

  • Hardcover: 400 pages
  • Publisher: University Of Chicago Press (November 3, 2008)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0226317617
  • ISBN-13: 978-0226317618
  • Product Dimensions: 14.3 x 11.4 x 1.2 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 7 pounds (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 4.9 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (7 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #331,760 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Average Customer Review
4.9 out of 5 stars (7 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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7 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Magnificent Volume About a Long Forgotten Magazine, December 4, 2008
By 
Charles J. Rector (Woodstock, IL United States) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: The Chicagoan: A Lost Magazine of the Jazz Age (Hardcover)
The Chicagoan was a magazine that was inspired by the New Yorker and lasted 9 years 1926-1935. Its subsequent downfall from prominence to obscurity was so complete that there are only 2 known complete sets of the magazine. Additionally, all of the artists and writers who toiled for The Chicagoan wound up every bit as obscure as their magazine. Up until the publication of Neil Harris's 400 page book, the very existence of The Chicagoan was unknown even to historians of the Windy City.

Neil Harris has done a masterful job of both recounting the history of this splendid magazine as well as presenting examples of the art and writing that graced its pages. Hopefully, this will prove to be the start of a trend of exploring this magazine's history as well as the history of Jazz Age Chicago.
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6 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Jazz Age Gem, December 1, 2008
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This review is from: The Chicagoan: A Lost Magazine of the Jazz Age (Hardcover)
Great graphics--in its day the magazine must have challenged the New Yorker neck-and-neck. Sparkles with the wit and zest of jazz age Chicago--featuring figures of the wanning Chicago Renaissance and the hectic nightlife and cultural scene of the naughty lady by the Lake in the late 1920s and early 1930s. A rescued gem that breathes life into the City's history. Marie J. Kuda
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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A treasure trove of information about a lost era in Chicago, January 13, 2009
By 
Stevazon (Evanston, IL USA) - See all my reviews
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This review is from: The Chicagoan: A Lost Magazine of the Jazz Age (Hardcover)
This book is a treat to read or to just leaf through. The reproductions of the pages of the Chicagoan are crisp and clear. It gives insight into what it might have been like to have lived in Chicago at the time in ways that probably no other book can give. While it can be a 'coffee table book,' it can also provide hours and hours of reading pleasure.
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