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Circulation passed the 1,000,000-copy mark in 1935. The 10 billionth copy of the U.S. edition was published in 1994.
Reader's Digest includes original articles, condensed articles reprinted from other magazines, book excerpts, and collections of jokes, anecdotes, quotations and other short pieces. The magazine's mission as set out by the Wallaces is to include one article for each day of the month, each of "enduring value and interest."
Articles in Reader's Digest cover a range of topics, including politics and government, health, international affairs, business, education and humor. Articles tend to be short to allow busy readers to keep up with a variety of topics without investing too much time.
Regular features include "Word Power," a vocabulary-building quiz; "Life in These United States," a collection of humorous or profound reader-submitted anecdotes; and " Laughter, the Best Medicine," a collection of jokes submitted by readers.
In contradistinction to its somewhat old-fashioned image, Reader's Digest is one of the most professionally made magazines in the world. E.g., in every article, every single "fact" mentioned is verified by a special research department. Every step in the process of selecting, condensing and translating articles is performed several times by different editors, and controlled by an elaborate editorial hierarchy, which guarantees that the final product is fully integrated into the specific Reader's Digest discourseIn Semantics, discourses are linguistic units composed of several sentences in other words, conversations, arguments or speeches. Conventional phraseology often characterises a discourse as 'learned', as in: 'The Professor delivered a learned discourse on.
This discourse can be characterized as follows. It is highly homogeneous, and articulates a very specific set of conservative values, some of which are important aspects of the dominant representation of American society. This political stance is considered so pronounced that at least one universityA university is an institution of higher education and of research, which grants academic degrees. A university provides both tertiary and quaternary education. University is derived from the Latin universitas meaning corporation since the first medieval, The University of GuelphMotto: Rerum cognoscere causas ( Latin: To learn the meaning of reality Chancellor Lincoln Alexander President Alastair Summerlee School type Public Religious affiliation None Founded 1964 Location Guelph, Ontario, Canada Enrollment 15,708 undergraduate1,, stated publicly to a query about carrying the title that they would only have the magazine as an example of propagandaNorth Korean propaganda showing a soldier destroying the Capitol building. This article is about the type of communication. For other meanings, see Propaganda (disambiguation). Propaganda is a specific type of message presentation, aimed at serving an age. Secondly, this model is introduced all over the world, but without being presented as "American". The local Reader's Digest editions quite consistently attempt to create ambiguity about the American, international or local character of the magazine.
The homogenisation procedures leading to the specific Reader's Digest discourse have various aspects. First of all, every issue has the same structure. There is, for instance, always one survival story (called "Drama in Real Life"), at least one individual achievement story, a medical article, several moralizing stories on human relations, several articles with practical advice, and some politically inspired stories in which bureaucracy, crime, radical ideologies and other behavior inconsistent with the dominant ideology of the magazine are exposed.
Secondly, the internal structure of those articles also corresponds to an elaborate and fixed model. The survival stories, for instance, have a blurb presenting the drama in medias res, then return in time with an elaborate description of the initial situation. Unlike what one would expect, rescue doesn't come at the very last paragraph: there is always time to restore the initial peace and formulate a lesson. The last sentences always either thank the Lord or mention the medals awarded by the story's heroes.
Thirdly, homogenisation also dominates the editorial procedures. The Digest features three types of texts. A first group are the articles condensed from other magazines. Both their selection and condensation are done by two independently working editors, checked by a third, and approved or corrected by at least two senior editors. The same goes for articles written exclusively for the Digest: authors are asked to write articles of normal length, which then pass through the same condensation and editing procedures as other articles. Finally, the Reader's Digest has a policy of what is called "planting" articles. It commissions articles it would like to reprint, donates them for free to other magazines for integral publication, and then publishes a condensed version itself. Thus even what is presented as non - Reader's Digest is controlled, or, in other words, the target system produces its own source texts.
This practice of "pseudo-reprint" makes it possible to "innocentize" messages by attributing them to another instance. However, this strategy gets a specific significance in the Reader's Digest. Indeed, it seems that the Digest makes conscious attempts to present itself as a faithful representation of legitimate public discourse, as the truthful incarnation of generally accepted Western civil values. Firstly, although for decades the condensations from other magazines constitute not more than 30-40 % of the editorial pages, the Digest continues to present itself as a reprint magazine, as an overview of journalistic discourse in the United States and abroad.
Secondly, Reader's Digest consistently de-historicizes its own discourse and values: every article in the Digest is by definition presented as being "of lasting interest". It avoids printing articles which risk to be outdated after a year or so, and even very specific events are described as instances of general situations and features of society and mankind. And thirdly, the Digest never acknowledges that society is divided in often conflicting interest groups: it always defends the citizen, the nation, mankind and morality in general against specific groups dividing and threatening them, thus imposing its specific viewpoints by transforming them into transcendental values.