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・ The Never Ending Illusion
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The Negro Digest
・ The Negro in the South
・ The Negro Motorist Green Book
・ The Negro Problem
・ The Negro Problem (book)
・ The Negro Soldier
・ The Negro Speaks of Rivers
・ The Negro Star
・ The Negro's Church
・ The Neighbor (1993 film)
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・ The Neighbor (newspaper)
・ The Neighbor No. Thirteen
・ The Neighbor's Wife and Mine
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The Negro Digest : ウィキペディア英語版
The Negro Digest

The ''Negro Digest'' (later renamed ''Black World'') was a popular African-American magazine founded in November 1942 by John H. Johnson. It was first published locally in Chicago, Illinois. The ''Negro Digest'' was similar to the ''Reader's Digest'' but aimed to cover positive stories about the African-American community.〔(【引用サイトリンク】author=Brancaccio, C. )
==History==
In 1942, when John H. Johnson sought financial backing for his first magazine project, he was unable to find any backers—black or white. From white bank officers to the editor of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People's (NAACP) nonprofit publication, all agreed that a magazine aimed at a black audience had no chance for any kind of success. Johnson then worked at the Supreme Liberty Life Insurance Company and had the idea of funding the ''Negro Digest'' by writing everyone on their mailing list and soliciting a two-dollar, prepaid subscription, calculating that even a 15 percent response would give him the amount needed to publish the first issue. To obtain the five hundred dollars needed for postage to mail his letters, he had to use his mother's furniture as a security on a loan.〔Lamb, Yvonne Shinhoster. "Publisher Helped Chronicle Black Life With Ebony and Jet". ''The Washington Post'', 9 August 2005: 01. Print〕 Johnson called the magazine The ''Negro Digest'' after the ''Readers Digest'' and reprinted articles by and about African-American scholars from the African-American and Caucasian media, although the ''Negro Digest'', usually contained reproductions of whole articles instead of digest.〔 The letter generated three thousand responses, and the first issue of ''Negro Digest'' was published in November 1942.
However, there were still obstacles to be overcome. Distributors were unwilling to put the periodical on their newsstands, for they too believed that it would not sell. Johnson persuaded his friends to haunt their neighborhood newsstands, demanding copies of ''Negro Digest''. Joseph Levy, a magazine distributor, was impressed and formed an alliance with Johnson. He provided valuable marketing ideas and opened the doors that allowed ''Negro Digest'' to hit the newsstands in other urban centers. The very first issue of The ''Negro Digest'' sold about 3,000 copies. Additionally, over the course of six months the magazine published close to 50,000 copies per month. One of the most interesting and well known columns in the magazine was entitled "If I Were a Negro." 〔Johnson, John H., and Lerone Bennett, Jr.. ''Succeeding against the Odds''. New York: Warner Books, 1989, pp. 32.〕 This column concentrated strongly on the unsolicited advice that the African-American race had received, by asking prominent citizens mainly of the white race for resolution to unsolved black problems. As a result of First Lady Eleanor Roosevelt's contribution to the popular column "If I Were a Negro," the copies sold doubled overnight. Following the year of 1945, John H. Johnson created other African-American magazines including both ''Ebony'' and ''Jet''. As a result of the publication of these two magazines, the circulation of ''The Negro Digest'' tended to decline. According to a ''New York Times'' article, it soon became unprofitable and ceased publication in 1951.〔Fraser, Gerald C. "Hoyt W. Fuller, A Literary Critic and Editor of Black Publication", ''The New York Times'', 13 May 1981, sec. A: 32.〕

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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