Ladies' Magazine (1823–1833)
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''Ladies' Magazine'' was a literary and artistic periodical published by writer and journalist
Peter Shalikov Prince Peter Ivanovich Shalikov (? – February 28, 1852, Serpukhov District of Moscow Governorate) was a Russian sentimentalist writer, journalist and publisher. Biography The offspring of the Georgian princely family Shalikashvili. Born in the ...
at the
Moscow University M. V. Lomonosov Moscow State University (MSU; russian: Московский государственный университет имени М. В. Ломоносова) is a public research university in Moscow, Russia and the most prestigious ...
printing house. The magazine was published twice a week since 1823, and weekly since 1829. Poets
Vasily Pushkin Vasily Lvovich Pushkin (russian: Васи́лий Льво́вич Пу́шкин; 27 April 1766 – 20 August 1830) was a minor Russian poet best known as an uncle of the much more famous Alexander Pushkin. Vasily Pushkin was born in Moscow, Ru ...
, Pyotr Vyazemsky,
Dmitry Khvostov Count Dmitry Ivanovich Khvostov (russian: граф Дми́трий Ива́нович Хвосто́в, – ), was a Russian poet, representing the late period of classicism in Russian literature. Count Khvostov, as he was widely known, was an ...
, playwright
Alexander Pisarev Aleksander Ivanovich Pisarev (russian: Александр Иванович Писарев, 14 July 1803, village Znamenskoye, Oryol Governorate, Imperial Russia, - 15 March 1828, Moscow) was a Russian playwright, translator and theatre critic. In ...
collaborated with the publication. Members of the editorial board were writer Mikhail Makarov and censor Ivan Snegirev. The cost of an annual subscription ranged from 35 to 40 rubles. The last issue was released in 1833.


Thematic focus

Starting to publish the ''Ladies' Journal'', Prince Shalikov promised to publish on his pages new works of all genres and "other interesting news for some reason".Larisa Lytkina. "Russian Protoglossy Magazine Periodicals. To the Statement of the Problem"
Saint Petersburg Humanitarian University of Trade Unions
According to his idea, the magazine was supposed to replace European female publications written out from abroad for readers.Valery Yarkho. From the History of Women's Magazines in Russia
/ref> The magazine published novels and novels, mostly sentimental (translations of the stories of Renneville, Genlis, Beaulieu and others); Much attention was paid to secular news and fashion reviews. A mandatory element of the content were ballads, madrigals, fables,
acrostic An acrostic is a poem or other word composition in which the ''first'' letter (or syllable, or word) of each new line (or paragraph, or other recurring feature in the text) spells out a word, message or the alphabet. The term comes from the Fre ...
, charades. Almost every issue published lyrics with notes. The section "Romantic Dictionary" gave original definitions to people and objects: "''Corset''. Vise of delights, graceful funnel of beautiful waist. ''Hat''. The roof of the human building".History of Women's Magazines
Echo, May 28, 2011
''Ladies' Magazine'' was one of the first in Russia to start posting color illustrations on its pages – these were mainly drawings of Parisian fashion.


Criticism and polemic

Contemporaries with a certain degree of skepticism belonged to the publishing project of Prince Shalikov. So, Vissarion Belinsky, criticizing the historical novel "Khmelnitsky, or the Accession of Little Russia", casually remarked: "You think that you are reading a tirade from the Ladies' Magazine". Publishers of the '' Polar Star'' Kondraty Ryleyev and
Alexander Bestuzhev Alexander Alexandrovich Bestuzhev ( rus, Алекса́ндр Алекса́ндрович Бесту́жев, p=bʲɪˈstuʐɨf, a=Ru-Alyeksandr Alyeksandrovich Byestuzhyev.oga; (), was a Russian writer and Decembrist. After the Decembrist rev ...
called ''Ladies' Magazine'' "fraudulent". The editor of the ''Moscow Telegraph'',
Nikolai Polevoy Nikolai Alekseevich Polevoy ( rus, Никола́й Алексе́евич Полево́й, r=Nikoláy Alekséevich Polevóy, ― ) was a controversial Russia, Russian editor, writer, translator, and historian; his brother was the critic and jou ...
, noted in one of the articles that "high scholarship is not the destiny of ''Ladies' Magazine'' <...> What they only think about the public, if they read Paris skirts and bonnets as the most fascinating adornment of magazines". The fairly warm relationship that the publisher had with Alexander Pushkin did not stop the poet from writing the ironic epigram
Prince Shalikov, Our Sad Newsboy
. Moreover, in one of the letters, Alexander Sergeyevich spoke of the prince as a person worthy of respect. For the polemic with critics, the Anti–Journalism column was created – it was mainly led by Peter Shalikov and Mikhail Makarov. In addition, in 1824, the publication provided its pages to Peter Vyazemsky, who was excommunicated from almost all magazines, and who, after the publication of the Pushkin's " Bakhchisarai Fountain", entered into a literary polemic with the poet Mikhail Dmitriev. The discussion was initiated by Dmitriev in Herald of Europe; Vyazemsky's response was the articles "On Literary Hoaxes", "Analysis of the Second Talk, Published in No. 5 of the Herald of Europe" and "My Last Word", published in the Ladies' Magazine – they listed the "errors" of the opponent, and he was called "prose poet and non-art prose writer".


Relations with the authorities

Six months after the first issue, the Minister of Public Education of the Russian Empire, Prince Alexander Golitsyn, expressed dissatisfaction with the jokes printed on the pages of the magazine and "ladies' negligee with lace". The Minister also did not like the fact that in Ladies' Magazine "sensual pleasures are set as the goal of real life and happiness", which he informed the trustee of the Moscow school district. As a result, Prince Shalikov was still allowed to keep fashionable headings in his journal, but it was recommended that "avoid reprehensible epicureism". The publisher apologized and promised that "he will be careful in every way".


Closure of the magazine

In the November issue for 1833 it was written: "''The Ladies' Magazine'' stops". Prince Shalikov intended to resume the publication of his publication in the future, but his plans did not materialize.


References


External links

* {{DEFAULTSORT:Ladies' Magazine 1823-1833 1823 establishments in the Russian Empire 1833 disestablishments in Europe Defunct magazines published in Russia Magazines established in 1823 Magazines disestablished in 1833 Magazines published in Moscow Russian-language magazines Women's magazines published in the Russian Empire Weekly magazines published in Russia