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Aso: A marathi literary little magazine started in the year 1962 by Ashok Shahane, Arun Kolatkar got published extensively. Aso meant ‘so be it’. advertised its forthcoming issue on the back cover of the little magazine Aso: “We will publish this whenever we damn well please.”

Asmitadarsh: (The Mirror of Identity), one of the first significant Dalit magazines of the period,

Atta in 1964 Raja Dhale Atta (Now), in 1964, a pamphlet-like “unperiodical,” which was distributed for free alongside the more established Aso, started by Ashok Shahane in 1963. 6 Shahane served as a mentor to Dhale (as Dhale himself claims in multiple interviews),  featured different languages on the cover of different issues: Punjabi, Sanskrit, Urdu, and English

Bombay Gazatte: newspaper

Chronicle:

Damn You: A Magazine of the Arts , started in 1965 by the poet Arvind Krishna Mehrotra and modeled on the American publication Fuck You: A Magazine of the Arts.

Freedom First: A Liberal monthly magazine founded by Minoo Masani in the year 1952 under the aegis of Indian Congress for Cultural Freedom(ICCF). Rooted in the liberal values had an anti-communist bend in writings

Journal of the Indian Institute of Architects (JIIA)

Kamgar Samachar: A Labour weekly of Kamgar-The Hitwardhak Sabha (Workers Welfare Association) started in the year 1910

Lalkaar: Magazine of PROYOM. PROYOM released a quarterly Hindi paper called Lalkaar (Challenge) edited by Narendra Panjwani, then a student, now a film critic.

Lalkar:

Pras Prakashan: Set up by Ashok Shahane with the sole purpose of publishing Kolatkar’s first Marathi collection

Rucha, Marathi little magazine published by a woman (Sushila Panse), edited by a woman (Anjali Kirtane), and one that had several women poets listed in the contents

Satyakatha: A marathi literary little magazine that was published through 1933 till 1982.

Shabda: (literally “word” or “speech”) in Marathi started by Dilip Chitre, Arun Kolatkar and others in 1954. Quest:Sponsored by the Indian Committee for Cultural Freedom. According to Nissim Ezekiel, its founding editor, it was concerned with the relation between politics and culture. It was in circulation for 22 years - August 1955 to May/June? 1976 and shut during the period of emergency. Thingy:

Vidroha (The Revolt) Namdeo Dhasal’s little magazine

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