Prospect (magazine)

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Not to be confused with The American Prospect magazine.

Prospect
Prospect November 2006 cover

Prospect November 2006 cover

Editor David Goodhart
Categories Politics, world affairs, arts and culture
Frequency Monthly
Circulation 25,000 / month
Publisher John Kelly
First issue October 1995
Company Prospect Publishing
Country Flag of the United Kingdom United Kingdom
Language English
Website www.prospect-magazine.co.uk
ISSN 1359-5024

Prospect is a monthly British general interest magazine, specialising in politics and current affairs. Topics include British, European, and US politics, social issues, art, literature, cinema, science, the media, history, philosophy, and psychology. It features a mixture of essay-length analytic articles, first-person reportage, one-page columns, and shorter, quirkier items.

Notable features of the magazine include head-to-head debates between two writers with opposing views on a subject; roundtable discussions, in which a series of experts with varying views on a given topic meet for a discussion, an edited transcript of which is published in the magazine; and interviews with major political and cultural figures (recent examples include Orhan Pamuk, Paul Wolfowitz, and Craig Venter). Prospect has also attempted to revitalise the art of the short story in Britain, by publishing new fiction in every issue, and by organising and sponsoring the National Short Story prize, the biggest award in the world for a single story, which launched in 2004. The first award, of £15,000, went to James Lasdun in May 2005.

The magazine is broadly centre-left, but prizes independence over ideology and its articles and authors span the political spectrum. In recent years the magazine's editor, David Goodhart, has stirred controversy with a series of articles arguing that the increasing diversity of the United Kingdom may weaken the bonds of solidarity on which the welfare state depends. The debate fed into the broader discussions of "Britishness" that have become increasingly common in the public sphere.

Well-known contributors to Prospect include Linda Colley, AC Grayling, Gordon Brown, Wesley Clark, Michael Lind, Michael Ignatieff, Francis Fukuyama, John Keegan, Margaret Atwood, and JM Coetzee.

The magazine has an ABC circulation figure of 24,740 (2005).

Prospect received worldwide attention it October 2005 when it published its list of the world's top 100 public intellectuals, which included Noam Chomsky, Umberto Eco, and Richard Dawkins. The magazine asked readers to vote for their top intellectual from the longlist; Chomsky was the eventual winner.

Contents

Prospect was launched in October 1995 by its present editor David Goodhart, then a senior correspondent for the Financial Times, and chairman Derek Coombs. Goodhart came up with the idea of producing an essay-based monthly general interest magazine—a form then unknown in Britain—while covering German reunification as Bonn correspondent for the FT.

The magazine tends to avoid a "line" on specific policy issues. It is broadly centre-left and Europhile, but perhaps its strongest leaning is "contrarian"—it devotes much space to articles debunking the "popular wisdom," on topics ranging from Japan's alleged economic crisis to the Mahdi army in Iraq.

"Out of mind," which began as a column by clinical neuropsychologist Paul Broks, who related tales of his patients and their symptoms. The columns formed the basis of a book, "Into the Silent Land," published by Atlantic Books. The column is now written by Alexander Linklater and Robert Drummond.

"Washington watch," an anonymously written diary-form column with gossip and rumours about domestic US politics.

"France profonde," by Tim King, a British resident of the France countryside. Month by month, King builds up a portrait of life in the French countryside.

"Brussels diary," another anonymous diary, this time focusing on EU politics.

"Out of Africa" by Richard Dowden, a collection of news items from Africa.

"Notes from Underground" was written by Dan Kuper, a cynical and disaffected worker who was eventually sacked from his job on the London Underground.

"Matters of taste" by Alex Renton, a food and drink column.

"Widescreen" by Mark Cousins, a film column.

"Private view" by Ben Lewis, a visual arts column.

"Between the lines" by Jason Cowley, a books column.

Since the start of June 2007, the Prospect website has also featured "First Drafts," a blog with several updates daily from the editorial team on politics, arts and other eclectic diversions.

"Political writing for grown-ups, well beyond the party political playpen... Europe's outstanding political and cultural monthly." Andrew Marr

"In the sound-bite world of broadcasting we need something to put it all in perspective. Prospect does that brilliantly. The added bonus is it's amusing too." John Humphrys

"Erudite, enjoyable and thought-provoking, Prospect is journalism at its best." David Cameron

"Good quality journalism and commentary is hugely important and I enjoy Prospect a lot. I read it regularly and I know that it is widely read among staff at Number 10." Tony Blair

"Prospect is thoughtful, original and eclectic. It is invariably well-written. Miss it at your peril." Jonathan Dimbleby

"Prospect is simply the best of its kind: provocative yet detached, thoughtful and elegantly written. An important read without being self-important." Jonathan Dimbleby

"I absolutely love it, I really do. The more politics they do, the better. I took it on holiday and my girlfriend's looking at me like I'm a weirdo. But it was addictive." Dermot O'Leary

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