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 both 'adult' pornographic magazines as well as more mainstream ones. Not included here are automobile, trains, modelbuilding periodicals and gadget magazines, many of which are primarily aimed towards men.
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
Europe
Asia
Oceania
Ethnic men's magazines
African/Afro-Caribbean American men's magazines
Latin American men's magazines
Gay male audience
Also refer to List of LGBT periodicals.
Lads' mags
Lads', lads, or laddie mags (magazines) (known exclusively as men's magazines in English-speaking North America) contain non-nude photography (or bare-breasted photography in the case of some British "lads' mags"), women accompanied by articles about the woman that is pictured (usually models or actresses); consumer stories about cars, tools, toys, music, TV and film, sports, foods, alcoholic beverages; or "guy tales" of sexual encounters.
International
- FHM (defunct)
- Maxim
- RUKUS
- Stuff
- Zoo Weekly (defunct)
Americas
Europe
Oceania
- People (Australia)
- Ralph (Australia) (defunct)
Sports magazines
- Black Sports Magazine (defunct)
- FourFourTwo
- Ring Magazine
- Sports Illustrated
- Sportsnet Magazine
See also
- List of health and fitness magazines
- List of women's magazines
- Men's adventure magazine
- List of pornographic magazines
References
Bibliography
- Benwell, Bethan (2003). Masculinity and men's lifestyle magazines. Oxford, UK Malden, Massachusetts, USA: Blackwell Pub./Sociological Review. ISBNÂ 9781405114639.Â
- Benwell, Bethan (March 2005). ""Lucky this is anonymous!" Men's magazines and ethnographies of reading: A textual culture approach". Discourse and Society. Sage. 16 (2): 147â"172. doi:10.1177/0957926505049616.Â
- Benwell, Bethan (2007). "New sexism? Readers' responses to the use of irony in men's magazines". Journalism Studies, special issue: Mapping the Magazine. Taylor & Francis. 8 (4): 539â"549. doi:10.1080/14616700701411797.Â
- Benwell, Bethan (Spring 2001). "Male gossip and language play in the letters pages of men's lifestyle magazines". The Journal of Popular Culture. Wiley. 34 (4): 19â"33. doi:10.1111/j.0022-3840.2001.3404_19.x.Â
- Benwell, Bethan (July 2004). "Ironic discourse: evasive masculinity in menâs lifestyle magazines". Men and Masculinities. Sage. 7 (1): 3â"21. doi:10.1177/1097184X03257438.Â
- Stibbe, Arran (July 2004). "Health and the social construction of masculinity in "Men's Health" magazine". Men and Masculinities. Sage. 7 (1): 31â"51. doi:10.1177/1097184X03257441.Â
- Betrock, Alan (1993). Pin-up mania!: the golden age of men's magazines, 1950-1967. Brooklyn, New York: Shake Books. ISBNÂ 9780962683350.Â
- Jackson, Peter; Stevenson, Nick; Brooks, Kate (2001). Making sense of men's magazines. Cambridge, UK Malden, Massachusetts: Polity Press Blackwell Publishers. ISBNÂ 9780745621760.Â
- Stibbe, Arran (July 2004). "Health and the social construction of masculinity in "Men's Health" magazine". Men and Masculinities. Sage. 7 (1): 31â"51. doi:10.1177/1097184X03257441.Â
External links
- Calcutt, Andrew. Changing the Subject: from the Gentlemanâs Magazine to GQ and Barack Obama at maglab.org.uk (November 2009)