Aeon (digital magazine)

Aeon Magazine
Web address www.aeon.co/magazine
Available in English
Created by Paul Hains and Brigid Hains
Editor Brigid Hains
Launched September 17, 2012 (2012-09-17)
Alexa rank
Negative increase 12,748 (June 2014)[1]

Aeon Magazine is a digital magazine of ideas and culture, founded by Paul and Brigid Hains in 2012.[2] Publishing a substantial essay nearly every weekday, Aeon declares itself as committed to asking "the biggest questions and [finding] the freshest, most original answers, provided by world-leading authorities on science, philosophy and society."[3] Contributors have included Julian Baggini, A.L. Kennedy, David Dobbs, Michael Graziano, Sven Birkerts, Marek Kohn, Tim Lott, Jessa Gamble, Ruth Padel, Steven Poole, John Quiggin, Roger Scruton, David Deutsch, Wendy Orent, Vincent T. DeVita, and Dava Sobel.

Longform

Aeon publishes long-form journalism.[4] Thomas Levenson writes that sites like Aeon are "in direct contradiction to the daily-evident failure of those media institutions that have tried to chase a presumed ever shorter attention span and/or a hunger for one flavor or another of raw meat."[5] Tech blogger Hamish McKenzie concurs, "It is the magazine that isn’t, the anti-aggregator, the publication that insists on going slow when every other force of the Internet demands that we speed up."[6]

Structure and content

Aeon covers an array of topics, often from a panoramic perspective that aims to capture the big picture. There is little attention paid to day-to-day current events, in order to focus instead on deeper and more enduring questions.

The magazine is organized into five sections, each focusing on broadly different subject matter. Aeon describes its sections as follows:

A sister site, Aeon Film, hosts short documentaries that track the same sections and grapple with similarly perennial issues.

Reception

Aeon has received attention from several leading digital outlets. Boing Boing[8] quoted contributor Erik Davis regarding Aeon as 'A new ... outfit that is charting a very interesting zone between science, religion, culture, and good writing.' The Browser, another popular aggregator, wrote of the magazine, 'Let nobody say that Aeon ducks the big questions.'

Several of Aeon's essays were featured on Conor Friedersdorf's annual list, '100 Pieces of Fantastic Journalism' for 2013. The magazine is also regularly featured and discussed on popular blogs such as Andrew Sullivan's The Daily Dish, the aggregator 3 Quarks Daily, Arts & Letters Daily, The New York Times The Stone, Hacker News and Digg.

Contributor Jessa Gamble's essay "The End of Sleep?" was named the best feature of 2013 by the Association of British Science Writers.[9]

References

External links

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