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Dnipro (magazine)

Dnіpro (Rus. Dnieper ) - Ukrainian literary, artistic and socio-political monthly magazine.

Dnipro
Dnipro.jpg
Magazine Cover No. 3, 2012
Specializationliterary and artistic magazine
Periodicityonce a month
TongueUkrainian
Chief EditorNikolay Lukiv
A country USSR , Ukrainian SSR → Ukraine
PublisherCentral Committee of the Komsomol and the Board of the Union of Soviet Writers of Ukraine, National Union of Writers of Ukraine
Edition History1927-1937 - "Young", 1937-1944 - "Young Bolshevik", since 1944 - "Dnipro"
Established1927
Web site

History

Published since 1927.

In 1927-1937 - under the name "Youngsters" , positioning itself as a "fighting detachment of the literary proletarian front", until June 1936 was the printing organ of the Central Committee of the Komsomol , and then the Central Committee of the Komsomol and the Board of the Union of Soviet Writers of Ukraine. In 1927-1934 it was published in Kharkov , from 1935 - in Kiev .

In August 1937, it received the name “Young Bolshevik” (“Young Bolshevik”) . It published works of Ukrainian Soviet writers, translations of Russian literature and literature of the peoples of the USSR , as well as foreign writers. In 1941, five issues were issued. Since 1944 it has been released under the name Dnipro.

The first editors were A. Kryzhany , I. Shevchenko , S. Bozhko .

The magazine's greatest success came in the 1960s.

The magazine published the works of V. Bykov , A. Dovzhenko , O. Gonchar , B. Oleinik , L. Kostenko , I. Svetlichny , I. Drach , G. Tyutyunnik , P. Tychiny , M. Rylsky and many others.

From the beginning of its activity, it served as a platform for the realization of the creative potential of youth.

The main editors of Dnipro magazine were such famous Ukrainian cultural figures as:

  • P. Usenko ,
  • A. Malyshko (1945-1947),
  • N. Rudenko (1948-1950),
  • A. Pidsukha (1953-1958),
  • Y. Mushketik (1958-1972),
  • V. Brovchenko (1973-1979),
  • V. Kolomiets
  • N. Lukiv (since 1984).

A long-term member of the editorial board of the journal, deputy chief editor (1962-1967) was Boris Oleinik .

The magazine has regular sections:

  • Prose
  • Poetry
  • Theater and Drama
  • Humor
  • Art workshop
  • Young growth
  • Criticism
  • Nobel
  • Astrology and others.

Since 2010, the updated Dnipro magazine is full-color, glossy, of a new format. Since 2011, the magazine has been published in electronic format.

In 2012, the Dnipro literary and art magazine was listed in the Ukrainian Book of Records in connection with the establishment of a new Ukrainian record. The magazine is recognized as the oldest literary and art magazine of modern Ukrainian-speaking authors in the "Publishing House" category.

Today Dnipro is a Ukrainian-language literary and artistic magazine that publishes the works of contemporary Ukrainian-language authors on its pages and thereby makes a significant contribution to the development of Ukrainian culture as a whole.

See also

  • Young growth (literary organization)

Links

  • The site of the electronic version of the Dnipro magazine (Ukrainian)
  • "Young Bolshevik"
  • Found literary and artistic journal of the most popular Ukrainian authors (Ukrainian)
Source - https://ru.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Дніпро_ ( Logbook)&oldid = 96093275


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