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As a leading organizer for the
Democratic Party, Van Buren paid close attention to party communication media such as newspapers and magazines. They received subsidies in the form of government printing contracts. At an intellectual level, his administration was strongly supported by
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was always in financial difficulties since it accepted no advertising and relied on subscriptions and donations to survive. O'Sullivan relinquished his editorial duties for a short time to practice law but continued to write for the magazine.
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Its editorials and articles provided the arguments that partisan needed to discuss
Democratic Party positions on the Mexican War, slavery, states' rights, and Indian removal.
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and criticizing what
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Democracy: O'Sullivan, the Democratic Review, and Empire, 1837—1840."
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was also (perhaps even primarily) a literary magazine, promoting the development of
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Defunct political magazines published in the United States
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Young
America: The Flowering of Democracy in New York City
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Defunct literary magazines published in the United States
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In 1837, O'Sullivan co-founded and served as editor for
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The magazine is also responsible for coining the term "
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in "Resistance to Civil
Government", better known as
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32:was a periodical published from 1837 to 1859 by
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201:Respectfully Quoted: A Dictionary of Quotations
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313:, an article by John L. O'Sullivan from the
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346:Magazines disestablished in 1859
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311:"The Democratic Principle"
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117:Elizabeth Barrett Browning
86:1840 presidential election
129:John Greenleaf Whittier
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266:"29. Manifest Destiny"
181:Young America Movement
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356:Jacksonian democracy
229:American Periodicals
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121:Nathaniel Hawthorne
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