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3:AM Magazine : ウィキペディア英語版
3:AM Magazine

''3:AM Magazine'' is a literary magazine, which was set up as 3ammagazine.com in April 2000 and is edited from Paris. Its editor-in-chief since inception has been Andrew Gallix, a lecturer at the Sorbonne.〔(''Guardian'' profile )〕
3:AM features literary criticism, nonfiction essays, original fiction, poetry, and interviews with leading writers and philosophers. Its slogan is "Whatever it is, we're against it."
==History==

The magazine was launched in 2000. In 2004, the editors unsuccessfully tried to prevent the ''Daily Mirror'' newspaper from publishing a short-lived ''3am Magazine'' supplement based around its 3am Girls gossip column.〔''Guardian'', 'Mirror's 3am Spin-Off Faces Legal Challenge', 9 March 2004 ()〕 The site was also called "irreverently highbrow" by ''The Observer'',〔''The Observer'', 'The Festival of Economics 2012', 11 November 2012 ()〕 "suitably roguish for a website that aims to be an online Fitzrovia" by ''The Daily Telegraph'',〔''Daily Telegraph'', 'Diary', 19 January 2004 ()〕 while ''The Independent'' has hailed its commitment to 'the avant-garde' on several occasions.〔''The Independent'', 'Does the credit crunch have a silver lining for literature?', 9 January 2009 ()〕 The Spanish daily ''ABC'' hailed it as "the Offbeats’ ''New Yorker''".〔(''ABC'', 'Sea lo que sea, estoy contra ello', 16 February 2009 )〕
An anthology covering its first five years of publishing, ''The Edgier Waters'', was published in Britain by Snowbooks in June 2006, featuring writers Steve Almond, Bruce Benderson, Michael Bracewell, Tom Bradley, Billy Childish, Steven Hall, Ben Myers, Tim Parks, Mark Simpson, HP Tinker and Kenji Siratori, as well as poetry pieces arranged by Sonic Youth's Thurston Moore and Lee Ranaldo alongside Tyondai Braxton.
A volume of city-themed fiction, ''3:AM London, Paris, New York'' followed in February 2008 (on Social Disease) and featured Henry Baum, Chris Cleave, Niven Govinden, Laura Hird, Toby Litt, Lee Rourke, Nicholas Royle, Matt Thorne and Evie Wyld.〔(Dogmatika.com, 'Tales of the City' )〕
In July 2012 the site was temporarily offline due to an issue with its server provider.〔''The Independent'', 'Web hits delete on magazine's 12-year archive', 6 July 2012 ()〕
In 2014, a book-length collection of 3:AM's popular 'End Times' interviews with notable philosophers was published by Oxford University Press, reflecting the magazine's increasingly philosophical emphasis.
3:AM was listed among Flavorwire's (25 best websites for literature lovers ) in 2013, and The Guardian's (top 5 literary blogs ) in 2014.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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