The Dude (magazine)

Summary

The Dude: The Magazine Devoted to Pleasure[1] was a men's magazine of the 1950s that was published bi-monthly by the Mystery Publishing Co., Inc. at 48 West 48th Street, New York, New York.[2] The magazine was published from August 1956[1] to 1976.[3]

The Dude
May, 1959 issue of The Dude (volume 3, Number 5)
EditorBruce Elliott
CategoriesMen's magazines
FrequencyBi-monthly
PublisherMystery Publishing Co., Inc.
Founded1956
Final issue1976
CountryUSA
Based inNew York, New York
LanguageEnglish

The magazine contained articles on style, music, society, politics, women, and contained seminude pictures of women. In March 1957 The Dude published work by William Faulkner.[4]

The Dude cost 50 cents.

In Vol 6, No 4 of March 1962 featured a "New Fiction" by Nelson Algren an American author who lived in Chicago in the 1950s. The article was titled "God Bless the Lonesome Gas Man...For He Protects Us All", categorized as humor. The article is about the infamous People's Gas company and the industrialization of Chicago. It alludes to a bar, which Algren calls "The Poor Loser's Corner", in reality, it is a Ukrainian Village local dive bar, Rainbo Club. This historical Chicago bar is located on the corner of Division and Damen, where the fictional character is last seen standing under the eerie traffic lights.

Vol. 5, No. 2, November 1960 contains a piece by William Lindsay Gresham, an American novelist.

Vol.7, No. 5, May 1963 contains an article and photos of Marilyn Monroe.

Vol, 2, No. 3, January 1958 includes fiction by Robert Penn Warren titled a "Christmas Gift" and James T. Farrell.


References edit

  1. ^ a b Bill Osgerby (Spring 2005). "The Bachelor Pad as Cultural Icon". Journal of Design History. 18 (1). JSTOR 3527021.
  2. ^ "The Dude: The Magazine Devoted to Pleasure--Vol. 5, No. 2, November 1960". Common Crow Books. Retrieved 6 May 2020.
  3. ^ Meagan Drillinger (12 September 2020). "Famous moments in magazine history from the year you were born". Stacker. Retrieved 2 October 2021.
  4. ^ Cara Salpini (Summer 2017). "Faulkner revisited". University of Virginia Magazine. Retrieved 6 May 2020.