About

The Bookman was a monthly magazine published by Hodder & Stoughton. First published in 1891, it was initially conceived as an advertising tool for Hodder & Stoughton’s catalogue. The journal also published essays and reviews. The journal was quick to respond to new technological innovations, including columns on film, photography and a supplement called 'The Illustrated Bookman', which featured articles on travel writing and accompanying photographs that from today's perspective could be read as 'orientalist'. These photographs exoticized the locales, highlighting the places' strangeness, otherness and their attraction as a space for adventure and exploration.

Under the editorship of Hugh Ross-Williamson in the 1930s, the journal increasingly reviewed books on India and Indian political issues. Aubrey Menen became the drama critic for The Bookman from October 1933 to May 1934. His columns engaged with the state of London's commercial theatre and argued for an alternative theatre that was politically engaging and addressed a wider constituency. He also intervened in debates around the creation of a national theatre. He called for a more realist style of acting and lamented the influence of film, which in his opinion had led to a dumbing down of theatre. The journal published a number of survey articles on Indian writing and regularly reviewed books on Indian politics. The journal was incorporated into the London Mercury in 1935, which was absorbed into Life & Letters Today in 1939.

Arthur St John Adcock (editor), William Robertson Nicoll (editor), Hugh Ross Williamson (editor).

Image credit

© Remaking Britain: South Asian Connections and Networks, 1930s – present

Citation: ‘The Bookman’, South Asian Britain, https://southasianbritain-demo.rit.bris.ac.uk/organizations/bookman/. Accessed: 6 July 2025.

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