Regards

Regards
Editor Rémi Duat
Categories News, photojournalism
Frequency Monthly
Circulation 25,000 (2005)
First issue 1932 - 1962, 1995 -
Country France
Based in Paris
Language French
Website regards.fr

Regards (also known as Regards Magazine or Revue Regards, trans: "Views") is a French news magazine. Created in 1932 as a Communist title, it is primarily known for photojournalism, and pre-dated other pictorial magazines such as Life (1936) and Paris-Match (1949). Regards was a periodical which launched photojournalism in the years before World War II. Leon Moussinac, critic and film theorist, a friend of Leon Delluc, runs the magazine. Robert Capa and Henri Cartier-Bresson are core photographers.


Picture (right): a Front page of "regards" (first period), featuring Juliette Greco in October 1951.

The magazine stopped publication in 1962, and then reappeared in 1995, under the leadership of the communist Henri Malberg. In 2000, it again reorganized under new management, trying to return to the original concept, of investigation of the world through photojournalism, surveys and contributions of intellectuals. According to the magazine's website, its modern readership is mainly composed of intellectuals and actors involved in social and political life.

After a second bankruptcy in October 2003, employees decided to create a "Scop" (société coopérative de production) or Cooperative. Roger Martelli and Clementine Autain ensure the direction of writing, and Remi Duat is the editor in chief.

Disambiguation

The French magazine Regards should not be confused with the Belgian magazine Regards which is produced by the Belgian Jewish community.[1]

References

  1. "Official website". Regards. Retrieved 14 November 2014.

External links

Look up regards in Wiktionary, the free dictionary.