New English Review

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

New English Review
DisciplineLiterature
LanguageEnglish
Edited by
Publication details
History2006–present
Publisher
FrequencyMonthly
Standard abbreviations
ISO 4New Engl. Rev.
Indexing
OCLC no.608163485
Links

The New English Review is a monthly far-right[1] literary magazine and journal of cultural criticism edited by Rebecca Bynum (editor and publisher), Kendra Mallock (managing editor), and senior editors Theodore Dalrymple and Jerry Gordon. It features essays, reviews, short fiction, and poetry. It was founded in 2006.[2][3] The magazine is based in Nashville, Tennessee.

Contributors[]

Since NER's founding, many notable poets, academics, and essayists have written for it including Peter Hitchens, Timothy Ives, Anthony Esolen, Richard Benkin, Conrad Black, Derek Turner, Ibn Warraq, Kenneth Francis, Guido Mina di Sospiro, Paul Gottfried, James Como, John Derbyshire, Jillian Becker, and James Stevens Curl.[4]

New English Review Press[]

The New English Review Press is, according to the mission statement of the World Encounter Institute, "a venue for in depth exploration of ideas through full length books."[5] The press has published books by notable authors, many of whom are also contributors to NER, including Michael Rectenwald, Theodore Dalrymple, Phyllis Chesler, Kenneth Francis, Rebecca Bynum, Norman Berdichevsky, Emmet Scott, Jerry Gordon, Kenneth Hanson, David P. Gontar, J. E. G. Dixon, J. B. Kelly, Ibn Warraq, Moshe Dann, James Como, Peter McLoughlin, Eric Rozenman, Paul Oakley, Elisabeth Sabaditsch-Wolff, Manda Zand Ervin, Albert Norton, Jr., Bahis Sedq, and Timothy H. Ives.

Political orientation[]

The New English Review has been called far-right by the Southern Poverty Law Center,[6] and Philip Dorling.[1] NER often hosts content that is sympathetic to the English Defence League.[7] New English Review has also been described as an anti-Islamic website.[8][9]

Nonetheless, New English Review Press has published books by Muslim authors. Manda Zand Ervin, author of The Ladies’ Secret Society: History of the Courageous Women of Iran,[10] is a former Iranian civil servant and refugee who has served on the United Nation’s Commission on the Status of Women. She advocates for the liberation of Iranian women from “gender apartheid”[11] and counts herself among “Muslim Americans” who reject the influence of “political ideologies in our religion.”[12] Bahis Sedq, author of The Quran Speaks,[13] “counts himself a faithful Muslim.”[14] New English Review Press has also published books by authors who are not far-right. Michael Rectenwald, author of Springtime for Snowflakes[15] and Beyond Woke,[16] has been characterized as “part of a breed of those on the left who yearn for the days of hardcore anti-capitalist, anti-war leftism, and class solidarity” who sees identity politics as a “roadblock for substantive left-wing issues.”[17] Timothy Ives, author of Stones of Contention,[18] applauds America’s “great multicultural democracy”[19] and is “a registered Democrat who has never voted for a Republican and never plans to.”[20]

References[]

  1. ^ a b The American far-right origins of Pauline Hanson’s views on Islam. The Australia Institute, 29 January 2017
  2. ^ Gatonni-Celli, Luca (July 15, 2013). "New English Review Up and Running Again". The American Spectator. Retrieved March 2, 2019.
  3. ^ "Mission Statement". New English Review. World Encounter Institute. Retrieved March 2, 2019.
  4. ^ "Archives by Author". New English Review. World Encounter Institute. Retrieved March 2, 2019.
  5. ^ "Mission Statement". New English Review. World Encounter Institute. Retrieved March 2, 2019.
  6. ^ "Was Steve King Persona Non Grata at CPAC 2020 – Or Not?". Southern Poverty Law Center. March 11, 2020.
  7. ^ (October 23, 2015). The Making of Anti-Muslim Protest. Taylor & Francis. p. 85.
  8. ^ Sveinung Sandberg (2013). "Are self-narratives strategic or determined, unified or fragmented? Reading Breivik's Manifesto in light of narrative criminology". Acta Sociologica. 56 (1): 74.
  9. ^ Mark Roycroft, Lindsey Brine, ed. (2021). Modern Police Leadership Operational Effectiveness at Every Level. Springer International Publishing. p. 289.
  10. ^ Manda Zand Ervin (2020). The Ladies’ Secret Society: History of the Courageous Women of Iran. New English Review Press. ISBN 9781943003334.
  11. ^ Manda Zand Ervin (March 8, 2021). Four Decades of Iranian Gender Apartheid. American Thinkerhttps://www.americanthinker.com/blog/2021/03/four decades of Iranian gender apartheid.html
  12. ^ Manda Zand Ervin (February 9, 2012). Islamists Do Not Flee Tyranny, They Bring It With Them. Gatestone Institute International Policy Council.[1]
  13. ^ Bahis Sedq (2021). The Quran Speaks. Revised Edition. New English Review Press. ISBN 9781943003518.
  14. ^ Blue Ink Review (September, 2017). The Quran Speaks, Bahis Sedq. https://www.blueinkreview.com/book-reviews/the-quran-speaks/]
  15. ^ Michael Rectenwald (2018). Springtime for Snowflakes. New English Review Press. ISBN 9781943003181.
  16. ^ Michael Rectenwald (2020). Beyond Woke. New English Review Press. ISBN 9781943003372.
  17. ^ Sam Raskin (November 6, 2016). Michael Rectenwald Wants to Make the American Left Great Again. NYULocal.com. https://nyulocal.com/michael-rectenwald-wants-to-make-the-american-left-great-again-af189c9aabdf
  18. ^ Timothy H. Ives (2021). Stones of Contention. New English Review Press. ISBN 9781943003549.
  19. ^ Timothy H. Ives (2021). Stones of Contention. New English Review Press. P. 205. ISBN 9781943003549.
  20. ^ Timothy H. Ives (2021). Stones of Contention. New English Review Press. P. 41. ISBN 9781943003549.

External links[]

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