New Society was a weekly magazine of social inquiry and social and cultural comment, published 1962-88. It drew on the emergent disciplines of sociology, anthropology, psychology, human geography, social history and social policy. It was also notable for its wide-ranging social reportage.[1]
One critic wrote that New Society became "a forum for the new intelligentsia"[2]. This new readership was especially created by the expansion of higher education in Britain from the early 1960s on; a key date being the foundation of the University of Sussex in 1961.
The magazine was launched by a small, London-based independent publishing house, Harrison Raison, which in 1956 had successfully launched New Scientist weekly magazine to serve the natural sciences. The idea was to create a comparable magazine of the social sciences.
New Society was usually perceived as centre-left. But it was fiercely non-partisan, never endorsing a political party. In the words of its founder-editor, Timothy Raison (1962–68), New Society sought to "to mirror, to analyse, to understand, not to exhort or moralise."[3] It tried to see the world as it was, not as it was supposed to be. These aims were continued and developed under the editorship of Paul Barker (1968–86), who was described by Eric Hobsbawm as the "most original of editors."[4]
In the magazine's pages, "ideas were always more important than ideology"[5]. One historian wrote that "New Society's hospitality to a dissenting view" was, he judged, "evidence that the closure of our democratic traditions is not yet complete"[6].
New Society saw itself as in the 1930s documentary lineage of Picture Post magazine, George Orwell, Mass-Observation and the documentary films of John Grierson. The magazine's founder-editor and first publisher had both been on the staff of Picture Post. By contrast with other London-based magazines of opinion, New Society's emphasis was strongly non-metropolitan, preferring to focus on "the Other Britain."[7].
Two of the most influential issues of the magazine were :
1. A special issue, "Non-Plan : an experiment in freedom," 20 March 1969, in which the design historian Reyner Banham, the urban geographer Peter Hall, the architect Cedric Price and Paul Barker argued jointly that much town and country planning was misguided and counter-productive and should be scrapped.[8]
2. The issue of 17 June 1976, which broke the Official Secrets Act by reprinting cabinet minutes. Ministers were discussing ways to curtail benefit payments to British families. The plans were dropped. The confrontation was an important step on the long road to the enactment of a Freedom of Information Act.
The magazine's independence ended in 1988, when it was absorbed into the New Statesman.[9]
In 2010 the V&A held an exhibition of documentary photographs from New Society.[10]
Three collections of essays from New Society were published: One for Sorrow, Two for Joy: Ten Years of "New Society" (1972)[11]; Arts in Society (1977)[12]; and The Other Britain (1982)[13].
Contributors to New Society included: