List of men's magazines
This is a list of magazines primarily marketed to men. The list has been split into subcategories according to the target audience of the magazines. This list includes 'adult' pornographic magazines as well as more mainstream ones. Not included here are automobile, trains, modelbuilding periodicals and gadget magazines which happen to have a predominantly male audience.
General male audience
These publications appeal to a broad male audience. Some skew toward men's fashion, others to health. Most are marketed to a particular age and income demographic. In the US, some are marketed mainly to a specific ethnic group, such as African Americans or Hispanics.
Americas
- Classic Style Magazine (defunct)
- Complex (defunct)
- Details (defunct)
- Esquire US
- GIANT (defunct)
- GQ USA
- Hustler
- Indy Men's Magazine (defunct)
- Maxim
- Men's Fitness (defunct)
- Men's Health US
- Men's Journal
- Men's Vogue (defunct)
- Muscle & Fitness
- New Man (defunct)
- Oui (defunct)[2]
- Penthouse (1965–present)
- Playboy (1953–2020) (defunct)
Europe
- #5 Magazine
- Buck (defunct)
- The Chap
- Esquire UK
- Lusso Magazine
- Magnate (defunct)
- Man About Town (2000s–2010s magazine)
- Men's Health UK
- Nuts (defunct)
- Sorted
- Zoo
Others
Asia
India
Others
Oceania
- Alpha (defunct)
- Chance International (defunct)
- GQ Australia
- Men's Health Australia
- Robb Report (Australia)
Ethnic men's magazines
African American men's magazines
- Black Enterprise
- King (US) (defunct)
- Smooth (US)
Latin American men's magazines
- Hombre
- Open Your Eyes (defunct)
Gay male audience
Also refer to List of LGBT periodicals.
- The Advocate
- Attitude
- AXM (defunct)
- Badi
- Bear Magazine
- bent
- Blue
- Butt
- DNA
- fab (defunct)
- FourTwoNine
- G Magazine (defunct)
- G-Men
- Gay Times
- Genre (defunct)
- Hello Mr. (defunct)
- Instinct
- Männer
- MyKali
- Next Magazine
- Out
- Outlooks (defunct)
- QX
- Siegessäule
- Têtu
- XY
- Zero (defunct)
Men's lifestyle magazines
Men's lifestyle magazines (lads' mags or laddie mags in the UK and specifically men's magazines in North America) contain non-nude photography or bare-breasted at most, accompanied by articles about the woman that is pictured (usually models, actresses or other celebrities) supplemented with consumer stories about men's fashion, cars, tools, toys, music, TV and film, sports, foods, alcoholic beverages; or "guy tales" of sexual encounters.
International
- FHM
- Maxim
- Stuff
- Zoo Weekly (defunct)
America
United States
- Blender (defunct)
- King
- Mob Candy
- Open Your Eyes (defunct)
- Smooth
- Sports Illustrated Swimsuit Issue
- Sylk Magazine
Colombia
Others
- H Para Hombres (Mexico)
- UMM (Canada)
- Urbe Bikini (Venezuela)
Europe
Sports magazines
- Black Sports Magazine (defunct)
- FourFourTwo
- Ring Magazine
- Sportsnet Magazine (defunct)
See also
References
- Kinetz, Erika (3 September 2006). "Who's the Man? Dave". The New York Times.
- Oui (magazine)
Bibliography
- Benwell, Bethan (2003). Masculinity and men's lifestyle magazines. Oxford, UK Malden, Massachusetts, USA: Blackwell Pub./Sociological Review. ISBN 9781405114639.
- Benwell, Bethan (March 2005). ""Lucky this is anonymous!" Men's magazines and ethnographies of reading: A textual culture approach" (PDF). Discourse and Society. 16 (2): 147–172. doi:10.1177/0957926505049616. hdl:1893/13065.CS1 maint: ref=harv (link)
- Benwell, Bethan (2007). "New sexism? Readers' responses to the use of irony in men's magazines" (PDF). Journalism Studies. 8 (4): 539–549. doi:10.1080/14616700701411797. hdl:1893/13077.CS1 maint: ref=harv (link)
- Benwell, Bethan (Spring 2001). "Male gossip and language play in the letters pages of men's lifestyle magazines". The Journal of Popular Culture. 34 (4): 19–33. doi:10.1111/j.0022-3840.2001.3404_19.x.CS1 maint: ref=harv (link)
- Benwell, Bethan (July 2004). "Ironic discourse: evasive masculinity in men's lifestyle magazines". Men and Masculinities. 7 (1): 3–21. doi:10.1177/1097184X03257438.CS1 maint: ref=harv (link)
- Stibbe, Arran (July 2004). "Health and the social construction of masculinity in "Men's Health" magazine" (PDF). Men and Masculinities. 7 (1): 31–51. doi:10.1177/1097184X03257441.CS1 maint: ref=harv (link)
- Betrock, Alan (1993). Pin-up mania!: the golden age of men's magazines, 1950-1967. Brooklyn, New York: Shake Books. ISBN 9780962683350.
- Jackson, Peter; Stevenson, Nick; Brooks, Kate (2001). Making sense of men's magazines. Cambridge, UK Malden, Massachusetts: Polity Press Blackwell Publishers. ISBN 9780745621760.
- Stibbe, Arran (July 2004). "Health and the social construction of masculinity in "Men's Health" magazine" (PDF). Men and Masculinities. 7 (1): 31–51. doi:10.1177/1097184X03257441.CS1 maint: ref=harv (link)
External links
- Calcutt, Andrew. Changing the Subject: from the Gentleman’s Magazine to GQ and Barack Obama at maglab.org.uk (November 2009)