Clare Market Review

Clare Market Review  
The new logo of the Clare Market Review as of the relaunch in academic year 2014-15, first officially used in Issue CX 'Tribute'.
Discipline Interdisciplinary
Language English
Edited by Rachel Alexandra Chua
Publication details
Publisher
Publication history
1905-1973, 2008-present
Indexing
OCLC no. 4075139

The Clare Market Review (CMR) was established in 1905 and is the oldest student-run journal in the UK. It is based at the London School of Economics and published by the university's Students' Union.

Notable contributors

Throughout its early years Beatrice and Sidney Webb, Fabian founders of the LSE and the New Statesman magazine, maintained a close writing relationship with the CMR, publishing many articles and essays, some of which later formed the backbone of their influential ten volume study, English Local Government. Playwright and fellow Fabian George Bernard Shaw contributed arts reviews. Marxist historian Ralph Miliband had numerous essays published and William Beveridge developed his notions of taxation in the journal's pages. In 1966 Bertrand Russell contributed a fierce polemic on the Vietnam war, entitled An Appeal to the American Conscience. Other contributors include the political and economic theorist Harold Laski, post-Keynsian economist Joan Robinson, Prime Minister of South Africa and soldier Jan Smuts, Liberal politician and peer David Steel, the noted anthropologist Edmund Leach, the humourist Alan Coren, the comedian and writer Spike Milligan, the critic Bernard Matthews, Roger McGough, Bernard Levin, the music theorist and pop musician Brian Eno, and the Liverpudlian Beat Poets Brian Patten and Jamie Carragher.

History

From 1905 to 1973 the review provided LSE students with an opportunity to voice their opinions free from the constraints and circumscriptions of university academia. In the summer term of 1972, editor John Stathatos summarised its objectives as follows:

"Its format and content changes to reflect the attitudes of its editors and the vicissitudes of the students’ union which publishes it... Clare Market’s strength has derived from its lack of insularity and determined freedom of control from both its publishers and the school which stands behind it."[1]

However, financial difficulty and general decline in interest led to a publishing hiatus from 1973 to 2008. In the Michaelmas term of 1973, the then editor captured the mood of imminent demise:

"Clare Market Review disappeared into the darkness of the Students’ Union for one session; and its only now struggling with the pangs of rebirth. Like any student publication it is hopelessly understaffed - this is a plea for its existence."[2]

Throughout its existence, the CMR has varied enormously in content and tone, sometimes covering avery wide spectrum of subject matter, from literary reviews to analysis of the world’s financial markets, and at other times focussing solely on poetry and the arts. Alongside variations in the subject matter, it would appear that the early days of the publication also saw variations in legibility - a 1907 edition of The Economic Journal was pithy in its appraisal:

"It is not easy to find room for improvement in the Clare Market Review, and all may not concur in our wish that the chronicle and reviews were as legible as they are readable, that the character of multum in parvo, which distinguishes the style, had not been made so literally true by the use of type which requires the "microscopic eye" denied to man." [3]

The Clare Market Review has a reputation of being an affectation for those who have been involved with it: in honour of his time spent writing for the CMR and The Beaver, Bernard Levin's name has recently been put to a journalism award run jointly by the LSE and The Times.[4] Karl Popper even had a copy of CMR amongst his personal papers.[5] Beyond simple affection the Clare Market Review's academic presence remains undiminished and the journal continues to be cited in numerous academic works.[6][7][8]

Present

With renewed backing from the Students' Union, a group of students re-launched the journal in November 2008. Looking to take influence from previous incarnations of the Review, their stated aim was to "break down the boundaries between academic and thinker, explore critical notions of studenthood, and in the process construct a collective existence for student thought at the LSE and beyond". The relaunch issue (Volume CIV, Issue 1) included contributions from, amongst others, Norman Birnbaum, Roger McGough, and Brian Patten.

Following a decline in readership, ailing finances, and shifting student interests, the journal was once again re-launched in the 2014-2015 academic year. With the advent of social media and online media platforms, the relaunch aimed to increase the journal's relevancy. In this frame of mind, the online edition of the journal was launched, with all submissions available for digital viewing. The relaunch included not just the establishment of an online edition, but extended to include a complete rebranding and restructuring of the journal and its staff. The relaunch proved a success, with high uptake figures and a record number of contributions to the relaunch issue, titled Tribute (Volume CX).

References

  1. Stathatos, J., 1972 Clare Market Review, 46 (3).
  2. Bardo, P., 1973 Clare Market Review, 47 (1).
  3. Edgeworth, F, Y., 1907 The Economic Journal, 17 (67). pp. 451-457.
  4. Flitton, Stuart (2007-05-10). "Annual Bernard Levin Award". London: The Times Newspaper. Retrieved 2008-03-22.
  5. Plunkett, John (2007-09-12). "Register of the Sir Karl Popper Papers". California Digital Library. Retrieved 2008-03-22.
  6. Berg, M (1996). "A Woman in History". Cambridge University Press. Retrieved 2008-03-22.
  7. Booth, P (2006). "Towards a Liberal Utopia". Continuum. Retrieved 2008-03-22.
  8. Rowse, T (2005). "Nugget Coombs: A Reforming Life". Cambridge University Press. Retrieved 2008-03-22.