Having read the interview by Natalie Collins with Magnify editor in chief Ruth Afolabi in the Church Times this week I was intrigued. So
I did a bit of searching and found, unsurprisingly for where the interview was
conducted, that a newsagent near work was one of the very few stockists of this
magazine, although it can also be ordered online.
It wasn’t hard to pick Magnify whose sub title tagline is
Faith, Feminism, Fashion out of the shelves of arty and indie coffee table
mags, but it wasn’t easy either. That made a good change, something Christian
but not cringey. It fitted the shelves in this outlet which caters largely but
not exclusively to young professional hipsters, their youth-tribe predecessors
and students.
The shop, magazine and the church I am working in are also close
to Shoreditch and so when Savage talks of the “rise of a kind of ‘hipster’
cultural capital” (Savage, 2015, p113) it’s impossible to ignore the relevance
in the geographical location this magazine is being produced in. The area, I’ve
noted over the last year as I’ve worked around here, has negative as well as
positive aspects. The cultural capital and the consumerism it spawns, as many
have noted, requires economic capital to engage in it. But as Justin Welby (2018) and others have noted young adults in the UK
are seeing a reversal in fortune compared to the previous generation. A large
number of people working around here are doing jobs in coffee bars and
restaurants which are minimum wage and so below the London real living wage
amount.
At £10 an issue and located only in a handful of outlets this beautifully produced product might be seen as a good example of the
contradictions which abound here of products which could benefit many and which
have great ethical roots being branded with a certain level of exclusivity and
put economically out of the reach of many. It’s not the first time I’ve come
across this cover price for a good quality niche magazine round here.
The design or overall mix of Magnify is refreshing for a
Christian publication aimed at Women. From the Black Panther star, Letitia
Wright, on the cover to the examination of inspirational quotations and
beautiful pictures that would not be out of place in Porter this is a
contemporary and beautiful magazine. The discussions of singleness and adoption
are interesting, well presented reads. The article on Light in our wounds tells
the story of former gang member Karl Lokko and is powerful testimony.
Then there are the sorts of issues about consumption and neo-liberalism which Walter Brueggemann has raised. Brueggemann,
(2014) and others have spoken out against the economic model which the cultural
models are built upon. They argue particularly
emerging culture are built upon a neo-liberal market ideology. This creates,
according to Brueggemann an idol or god which is based upon the need for more
and more effort to meet “endless desires and needs that are never met”, (Brueggemann,
2014, p13). They have also been particularly critical of the advertising
industry. This podcast tells you a bit more.
So would I recommend it? Clearly yes, it’s a great
publication. Would I like it to see it develop a little more to be even more
inclusive? Yes of course. The main thing is though I would like to see this product
get some major funding behind it and become generally available (say for a
cover price of £5 – which would still be high for many but may enable people to
buy a few copies to get passed around).
Brueggemann, W, (2014), Sabbath as Resistance: Saying No to the
Culture of Now, Westminster John Knox Press, Louisville
Savage, M, (2015), Social Class in the 21st Century,
Pelican Books, London
Storkey, E, (1989) What's Right With Feminism, Third Way Books,
Welby, J, (2018), Reimagining Britain: Foundations for Hope,
Bloomsbury, London
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