Former editors | James Oppenheim, Waldo Frank, and Van Wyck Brooks |
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Categories | Literary journal |
First issue | 1916 |
Final issue | 1917 |
Country | United States |
Language | English |
The Seven Arts, an early example of the little magazine, was edited by James Oppenheim, Waldo Frank, and Van Wyck Brooks; it appeared monthly from November 1916 through October 1917. Jointly envisaged by Oppenheim and Frank, The Seven Arts was an attempt to anticipate and influence the United States' emerging “renascent period;”[1] in the first issue the editors explain: “In short, The Seven Arts is not a magazine for artists, but an expression of artists for the community.”[2] Of the many contributors to the magazine, Sherwood Anderson, J. D. Beresford, Randolph Bourne, Theodore Dreiser, Robert Frost, Kahlil Gibran, D. H. Lawrence, Amy Lowell, Paul Rosenfeld, and Louis Untermeyer were among the most prolific.