Picture Post

Picture Post
Cover of the Picture Post dated 21 September 1940. Caption: Camouflage – a home guard learns a lesson in cover at Osterley Park Training School
Cover of the Picture Post vol. 8 no. 12
dated 21 September 1940
EditorTom Hopkinson
Former editorsStefan Lorant, Max Raison
Staff writersMacDonald Hastings, Lorna Hay, Sydney Jacobson, J. B. Priestley, Lionel Birch, James Cameron, Fyfe Robertson, Anne Scott-James, Robert Kee, Timothy Raison and Bert Lloyd
CategoriesCurrent affairs; photojournalism
Frequencyweekly
Circulation1,950,000 copies a week in 1943
PublisherSir Edward G Hulton
First issue1938
Final issue1957
CountryUnited Kingdom
Based inLondon
LanguageEnglish

Picture Post was a photojournalistic magazine published in the United Kingdom from 1938 to 1957.[1] It is considered a pioneering example of photojournalism and was an immediate success, selling 1,000,000 copies a week after only two months.[2] It has been called the UK's equivalent of Life magazine.[3]

The magazine’s editorial stance was liberal, anti-fascist, and populist,[4] and from its inception, Picture Post campaigned against the persecution of Jews in Nazi Germany. In the 26 November 1938 issue, a picture story was run entitled "Back to the Middle Ages": photographs of Adolf Hitler, Joseph Goebbels and Hermann Göring were contrasted with the faces of those scientists, writers and actors they were persecuting.

  1. ^ "The Picture Post Historical Archive, 1938–1957". Gale Digital Collections. Retrieved 19 October 2015.
  2. ^ Hopkinson, Tom (1970). Picture Post 1938-1950. Penguin. p. 11. ISBN 978-0-1400-3115-7.
  3. ^ "What is Photojournalism? | Icon Photography School". 13 June 2011.
  4. ^ Hulton|Archive – History in Pictures Archived 2013-05-27 at the Wayback Machine History of Picture Post by the Archive Curator Sarah McDonald, 15/10/04. Accessed March 2008