Elsevier (magazine)
Elsevier is a Dutch weekly political magazine. It appears on Saturdays, the editorial office is in Amsterdam . The magazine is published by Reed Business Information BV, which is a subsidiary of Reed Elsevier . The orientation of the magazine is considered to be right-wing conservative and economically liberal, a large proportion is reserved for the economic and financial investment section. Arendo Joustra has been the editor-in-chief since 2000 . The sold circulation in the first quarter of 2008 was 143,539 copies.
history
The first edition of Elsevier appeared as Elsevier's Weekblad on October 27, 1945; previously the publisher Elsevier's Uitgeversmaatschappij had already published Elsevier's Geïllustreerd manuscript since 1891 , until it was banned by the German occupiers in 1940 during the Second World War . With the opposition to the decolonization of the Dutch East Indies and the extensive economic reporting, Elsevier clearly displayed the political line - conservative in social, liberal in economic matters. The latter gained even greater importance when the magazine was split up into Elsevier's Magazine and the pure business paper Elsevier's Weekblad (EW) in 1965 , although the latter was reintegrated into the magazine in 1988.
In 1965-85 Elsevier's Magazine moved from a literary to a journalistic style. Politically little changed, as editor-in-chief Ferry Hoogendijk consistently criticized the De Uyl government , but was replaced in 1985 by the former editor-in-chief of the NRC Handelsblad , André Spoor, who turned the paper inside out and changed it to his current one, also due to complaints from the editorial staff about his authoritarian management style Names. Spoor had to u Elsevier after two years. a. left again due to illness, since then his successors have been able to keep Elsevier on course, unlike many other print media, which have clearly lost circulation since the turn of the millennium .
Well-known authors
- Cees Nooteboom worked as a freelancer for Elsevier from 1957 to 1960 .
- Pim Fortuyn had a weekly column in the magazine from 1993 to 2001 and became known to a wider public through this.
- Leon de Winter maintained a controversial blog in the online edition from 2004 to 2007, for which he continues to write articles at irregular intervals.
Previous editors-in-chief
Elsevier's Magazine | Elsevier's Weekblad | ||
Henk Lunshof | 1946-1954 | ||
Wouter de Keizer, Kornelis Douwe Bosch | 1954-1959 | ||
Henk Lunshof, Wouter de Keizer, Kornelis Douwe Bosch |
1959-1962 | ||
Henk Lunshof, Wouter de Keizer | 1962-1964 | ||
Henk Lunshof | 1964-1965 | ||
like Elsevier's Weekblad | Wouter de Keizer, Ferry Hoogendijk, Jan Vermeulen |
1966 | |
like Elsevier's Weekblad | Wouter de Keizer, Ferry Hoogendijk, Jan Vermeulen, Willem Leonard Brugsma |
1966-1968 | |
like Elsevier's Weekblad | Wouter de Keizer, Ferry Hoogendijk, Jan Vermeulen, Martin Duyzings |
1968 | |
Ferry Hoogendijk, Jan Vermeulen, Martin Duyzings |
1968-1971 | Ferry Hoogendijk, Jan Vermeulen, Martin Duyzings |
1968-1970 |
Ferry Hoogendijk, Jan Vermeulen, Daan van Rosmalen |
1971-1975 | Henny ten Brink | 1970-1971 |
Ferry Hoogendijk | 1975-1985 | Han Folkertsma | 1971-1974 |
Elsevier | Han Folkertsma, Nic van Rossum | 1974-1975 | |
André Spoor | 1986-1988 | Nic van Rossum | 1975-1988 |
Johan van den Bossche | 1988-1993 | ||
Hendrik Jan Schoo | 1993-1999 | ||
Arendo Joustra | 2000– |
Internet
An online edition has only been available since 2004, so Elsevier and HP / De Tijd were launched much later than De Groene Amsterdammer , which went online in 1994. In contrast to the national daily newspapers, there is no multimedia content, blogs , web feeds and newsletters complement the articles.
Edition development
Sold circulation since the investigation by the "Oplage Instituut" | |||||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
year | 1999 | 2000 | 2001 | 2002 | 2003 | 2004 | 2005 | 2006 | 2007 | 2008, 1st quarter | 2014, 1st quarter |
Edition | 124.160 | 129,630 | 131,390 | 134,927 | 135,459 | 135.114 | 132,949 | 137,332 | 142,888 | 143,539 | 81,285 (print) + 77,561 (digital) |
literature
- Gerry van der List: Meer dan een weekblad. De divorced van Elsevier. Uitgeverij Bert Bakker, Amsterdam 2005. ISBN 90-351-2874-5
Web links
- Elsevier website (Dutch)
- Online archive of the predecessor Elsevier's Geïllustreerd Maandschrift with all issues in the original layout (Dutch)
Individual evidence
- ↑ Het Online Instituut (Dutch / partly English)