Azure (magazine)

Azure: Ideas for the Jewish Nation (Hebrew: תכלת) (Tchelet) was a quarterly journal published by the Shalem Center in Jerusalem, Israel. Azure published new writing on issues relating to Jewish thought and identity, Zionism, and the State of Israel. It was published in both Hebrew and English, allowing for the exchange of ideas between Israelis and Jews worldwide.[1]

Azure
Winter 2007 cover
EditorAssaf Sagiv
CategoriesJewish affairs, Zionism, philosophy
FrequencyQuarterly
Year founded1996
Final issue
Number
2011
46
CompanyThe Shalem Center
CountryIsrael
Based inJerusalem
LanguageEnglish and Hebrew
Websitehttp://www.azure.org.il
ISSN0793-6664

Azure was established in 1996 and was originally published twice a year, but grew into a quarterly. The journal's first editor-in-chief was Ofir Haivry, followed by Daniel Polisar and David Hazony. Assaf Sagiv was editor in chief from 2007 to 2012.

Notable contributors have included Michael Oren, Yoram Hazony, Yossi Klein Halevi, A. B. Yehoshua, Ruth Gavison, Amnon Rubinstein, Natan Sharansky, Alain Finkielkraut, Amotz Asa-El, David Hazony, Meir Soloveichik, Claire Berlinski, Robert Bork, and Moshe Ya'alon.

The journal published Hebrew translations of classic essays by authors such as Immanuel Kant, David Hume, William James, G. K. Chesterton, Martin Luther King, Jr., C. S. Lewis, Alasdair MacIntyre, Winston Churchill, Matthew Arnold, and Leo Strauss.

The emphasis of the journal was on strengthening Jewish and Zionist values. It was highly critical of post-national and radical trends in academia,[2] opposed judicial activism in the Israeli legal system,[3] and supported free-market reforms in the Israeli economy.

The publication ceased operations with the Autumn issue, no. 46, alerting its subscribers to this fact mid-2012. According to the letter sent to its subscribers, "circumstances and resources no longer enable [the magazine] to continue publication."

Selected articles

gollark: Maybe osmarksßspointers™ would fix this if I added built in charset conversion abilities
gollark: - can also shove in arbitrary HTML/CSS/JS for purposes
gollark: - CSS/HTML is quite nice when it works
gollark: - markdown renders to HTML mostly- remotely accessible
gollark: It's not inevitable as minoteaur merely abuses a browser as a GUI frontend.

References

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