Category
page 1Magazines disestablished in 1945
Signal
German propaganda magazine published by the Wehrmacht during WWII
Berliner Illustrirte Zeitung
German illustrated magazine
Yank, the Army Weekly
American magazine during World War II
Illustrierter Beobachter
magazine
NS-Frauen-Warte
The NS-Frauen-Warte ("National Socialist Women's Monitor") was the Nazi magazine for women. Put out by the NS-Frauenschaft, it had the status of the only party approved magazine for women and served propaganda purposes, particularly supporting the role of housewife and mother as exemplary.
The Young Companion
Shanghai-based magazine, published 1926-1945.
Spremnost
Spremnost was a weekly newsmagazine of the Ustaše movement with articles about many topics like politics, war, economy and culture. It was published in Zagreb from early 1942 to the collapse of the Independent State of Croatia in May 1945. Its publication was restarted in 1957 in Sydney by , a former Ustaše Youth member who had fled to Australia in 1950. Publication of the magazine ceased in 2007.
Nástup
thumb|upright|Nástup, volume 7 issue 6 (1938)
Nástup (translated as "line up" "forming ranks", "deployment", or "ascent") was a semimonthly Slovak periodical, published between 1933 and 1940, that advocated Slovak autonomy, ethnonationalism, and antisemitism. Founded by Ferdinand Ďurčanský and his brother Ján, the magazine was oriented at younger Slovak Catholics, especially university students. Its readers, the most radical wing of the Slovak People's Party, were called "Nástupists" or "Nástup faction"; many of them had been previously affiliated with Rodobrana paramilitary and later with the
Luceafărul
Romanian magazine
Hawar
former Kurdish literature magazine