March 22, 2010
UTNE READER

The 1996 Winners

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UPDATE: Visit the nominees and winners of the 2009 Utne Independent Press Awards.

For 8 years UTNE READER has recognized excellence in alternative and independent magazine publishing through its Alternative Press Awards. The Awards are a distinction made by our staff to celebrate the seldom recognized efforts of the alternative press, and as a service to our readers who want to know about alternatives to mass media magazine publishing. These awards honor individual publications that especially impressed our editorial staff during the previous year.

The awards are not the result of a competition; they emerge from the extensive reading our staff does as part of the process of producing UTNE READER. Our editors read many hundreds of alternative and independent titles looking for articles and ideas that are interesting, timely, well-written, and thought-provoking.

 

GENERAL EXCELLENCE (Circulation over 50,000)
Mother Jones
Editor in Chief: Jeffrey Klein
Currently celebrating its 20th anniversary, this hard-hitting bimonthly continues to be one of the most influential forces in the alternative press. Klein attributes the magazine's success to the passion of the editorial team, which, he says, hasn't succumbed to the "cynicism masquerading as professionalism" that dominates current journalism.
 

 

GENERAL EXCELLENCE (Circulation 10,000 - 50,000)
Index on Censorship
Editor: Ursula Owen
 
This important British digest takes us around the world to examine the never-ending attacks on freedom of the press. The magazine is an intriguing blend of essays, photographs, and infographics, all of which remind us that freedom and freedom of the press are inextricably linked.

Email: contact@indexoncensorship.org
URL: www.indexoncensorship.org

 

GENERAL EXCELLENCE (Circulation under 10,000)
Grand Street 
Editor: Jean Stein
 
Influenced by the zine revolution, this avant-garde literary journal integrates concern about contemporary political issues with a keen desire to push art forward. Each issue of Grand Street explores a different theme and gives us a feel of how life really is: beautiful, frightening, and sometimes very strange.

Subscription information: 800-807-6548

 

ART AND DESIGN EXCELLENCE
see: A journal of visual culture (Now Defunct) 
Editor in Chief: Andy Grundberg
Design: Toki Design
 
This high-quality journal uses its own highly protean layout as a testing ground to explore the ways images shape our visually embattled lives. When it works, as it usually does, the effect is astounding and quite beautiful.

 

CULTURAL ISSUES 
Border / Lines: Canada's magazine of cultural studies
Managing Editor: Julie Jenkinson
 
Despite its brooding, self-conscious design, this Canadian cultural studies magazine examines unlikely aspects of our mass culture (the morphing craze, or closed captions on TV) with humor, intelligence, and an eye for sassy scholarship--nicely bridging the gap between academic and popular magazines.
 
Information: 416-921-6446 

 


EMERGING ISSUES
New Scientist
Editor: Alun Anderson
 
Whether it's covering particle physics, linguistics, or squirrel behavior, this weekly British science magazine offers great coverage of up-to-the-minute scientific discoveries. The magazine's writing empowers the lay reader and makes us feel that science is understandable and an important part of our lives.
 

 

FEATURE WRITING
Michigan Quarterly Review
Editor: Laurence Goldstein
 
The editorial vision of this University of Michigan literary journal fuses scholarship with quality writing to explore its subjects in a lovingly exhaustive manner--whether it's a double issue on the cinema--or simply author Ariel Dorfman's ideas on language and translation. The result: a profound sense of what really matters in contemporary culture.
 
Information: Room 3032 Rackham Bldg., 915 E. Washington St., Ann Arbor, MI 48109-1070

 

INTERNATIONAL REPORTING
Third World Resurgence
Publisher and Chief Editor: S.M. Mohamed Idris
 
With fascinating articles on topics ranging from the threat of biopiracy to the impact of Barbie dolls on children in impoverished countries, this information-packed monthly published by the Third World Network in Penang, Malaysia, sheds light on important issues from the too-often-ignored perspective of the Southern Hemisphere.
 

 

INVESTIGATIVE REPORTING
Mother Jones
Editor in Chief: Jeffrey Klein
 
Currently celebrating its 20th anniversary, this hard-hitting bimonthly continues to be one of the most influential forces in the alternative press. Klein attributes the magazine's success to the passion of the editorial team, which, he says, hasn't succumbed to the "cynicism masquerading as professionalism" that dominates current journalism.
 

 

BEST NEW TITLE
Double Take
Editors: Robert Coles and Alex Harris
Design and Production: Molly Renda
 
This quarterly magazine was born all grown up. DoubleTake confidently combines great writing on important subject matter with compelling photo essays that tell their own stories. From its first issue--which included a wonderful essay by Bill McKibbon on Kerala, India (reprinted in Utne Reader #74)--Coles and Harris have brought to life new worlds we might not have imagined otherwise.
 

 

SPECIAL INTEREST
Mouth: The Voice of Disability Rights
Editor: Lucy Gwin
 
Taking no prisoners in its fight for civil rights, Mouth vehemently (and humorously) distinguishes between advocacy (which its editors consider suspect at best) and real activism--which, they insist, is the only way that "crips" can change the largely indifferent national health care system.
 
Information: 61 Brighton St., Rochester, NY 14607

 

SERVICE
Prison Life (defunct)
Editor and Publisher: Richard Stratton
 
This in-your-face magazine provides an important service to readers both in and out of prison. Not only does it provide a realistic picture of a much-mythologized world, it also includes everything from recipes for in-cell cooking to exposés of human rights violations in the nation's prison system. With the rapid growth of prison populations today, maintaining perspective on the human issues involved is critical, and Prison Life does just that--with courage and integrity.
 
 

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