Boston Review combines commitments to public reason and literary imagination. Putting politics and poetry on the same page, we anticipate a world that is at once more democratic and more imaginative than our own. We are a magazine of political, cultural, and literary ideas, and we take that designation seriously: our intellectual range distinguishes us from any political journal or literary quarterly, while our seriousness of purpose sets us apart from other general-interest magazines.
Boston Review's political project is especially vital to its editorial identity. And that project is defined by a set of convictions and a practical premise. Briefly summarized, the convictions are egalitarian, radically democratic, and culturally pluralist: we hope for a world with greater socioeconomic equality, in which life chances do not reflect the morally irrelevant differences among us; a world with more participation by citizens in running their common affairs, in which the exercise of political power is shaped by our common reason and not by private wealth; a world in which equal citizens acknowledge the diversity of decent ways to live, and do not seek to confine human existence to a single, authoritative pattern. Our practical premise is that the active pursuit of these convictions requires well-founded confidence in their soundness and rational defensibility - confidence that justice commands a democracy at once more egalitarian, participatory, and culturally pluralist than our own, that such political values are rooted in reason, not simply a matter of taste, preference, or practical convenience.
Though they are of great importance, these fundamental political values are highly abstract. To clarify their content, develop their programmatic and policy implications, encourage the confidence essential to their successful pursuit, and foster the broader culture of mutual respect without which democracy founders, Boston Review provides a forum devoted to debate about basics, in which egalitarian-democratic and culturally pluralist convictions provide the center of intellectual gravity:
In short, Boston Review is a left-center-of-gravity magazine of ideas: a magazine that aims to expand political debate, shift the cultural assumptions that frame that debate, and create greater space for political initiative guided by egalitarian, radically democratic, and culturally pluralist values.
— Joshua Cohen, Editor-in-Chief
BR Footnote:
Boston Reviews intern blog
A Cause for Celebration at Boston Review! (03/10/10)
Putting Out Fires, Starting New Ones (03/3/10)
In Lebanon, history on repeat (02/24/10)
Culture-the missing piece of effective Counterinsurgency Policy (01/26/10)
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