The Young Companion
Shanghai-based magazine, published 1926–1945 / From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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The Young Companion, known as Liángyǒu (Chinese: 良友; pinyin: Liángyǒu; Wade–Giles: Liang-yu) in Chinese, was a pictorial with captions in both Chinese and English, published in Shanghai beginning February 1926.[1] Although the direct translation of Liangyou is "Good Companion", the magazine bore the English name The Young Companion on the cover.[2] Called an "iconic magazine" and "a visual shortcut for 'old Shanghai'", the magazine has proven useful in modern times to examine the glamorous side of colonial-era Shanghai.[2] It may have been the most influential large-scale comprehensive pictorial in the 1920s, at least in Asia. It ceased publication in 1945. There were 174 issues in total, which includes the two special issues not given monthly issue numbers, the Sun Yat-sen Memorial Special Issue and the Eighth Anniversary issue.[3] Since 1945, it has been repeatedly reestablished, but the impact has not been the same.
Editor-in-Chief | Zhang Yiheng |
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Former editors |
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Frequency | Weekly |
Founded | 1926 |
First issue | 15 February 1926 |
Final issue | October 1945 |
Country | China |
Based in | Shanghai (Hong Kong and Chongqing during WWII) |
Language | Chinese, English |
The magazine ran a mixture of content, including photography, art, literature and sports.[1][4]