The Critic (modern magazine) should not be confused with The Critic (Victorian-era magazine).
The Critic | |
Image Alt: | border |
Editor: | Christopher Montgomery[1] |
Editor Title: | Editor |
Editor2: | Graham Stewart |
Editor Title2: | Deputy Editor |
Editor3: | Ben Sixsmith |
Editor Title3: | Online Editor |
Editor4: | Sebastian Milbank |
Editor Title4: | Executive Editor |
Previous Editor: | Michael Mosbacher |
Frequency: | Monthly |
Format: | A4 |
Publisher: | Olivia Hartley |
Circulation Year: | 2020 |
Total Circulation: | 19,654 (November–December 2020)[2] |
Founded: | 2019 |
Firstdate: | November 2019 |
Company: | Locomotive 6960 Ltd |
Country: | United Kingdom |
Based: | London |
Language: | English |
Issn: | 2633-2655 |
Oclc: | 1140170196 |
The Critic is a monthly British political and cultural magazine.[3] Contributors include David Starkey, Joshua Rozenberg, Peter Hitchens and Toby Young.
The magazine was founded in November 2019,[4] with Michael Mosbacher, former editor of Standpoint, and Christopher Montgomery, a strategist with the European Research Group of Eurosceptic Tory MPs,[5] as co-editors. It was funded by Jeremy Hosking, a Conservative party donor[6] who had previously donated to Standpoint.[7]
Mosbacher described The Critic as competing with Standpoint. Mosbacher said that Hosking had been unwilling to fund Standpoint without more of "the culture wars content" that interested him, but Standpoint board resisted this direction. The Times Literary Supplement described The Critic as having a resemblance to The Spectator, with a mission "to criticize the critics".[8] Ian Burrell of The Drum called The Critic a "contrarian conservative magazine".
In his essay wishing success for the new publication, David Goodhart, founder of Prospect, remarked "Does the world need another magazine of tastefully written… conservatively inclined thinking? Probably not." Peter Wilby of the New Statesman responded "I would say probably yes, so why do we never get one?"
Josh White, writing in Battleground, said "Any Conservative who is aggrieved by the lack of social cohesion in the wake of austerity may pick up the mag and feel his (usually his) prejudices reaffirmed".[9]