The Beacon (magazine)

The Beacon was a Caribbean "little magazine" published in Trinidad monthly from March 1931 to November 1933, and briefly revived in 1939.

[1] The main names associated with the magazine were Albert M. Gomes, C. L. R. James and Alfred H. Mendes, who formed the core of what was known as "the Beacon group", regarded as having "shaped a nascent Trinidadian literary consciousness in the 1930s".

[3] Preceded by the short-lived pioneering literary magazine Trinidad (which made two appearances, in 1929 and 1930),[4] The Beacon "marked the emergence of Trinidadian short story and the beginning of national literature in Trinidad",[1] one of its achievements being "to encourage West Indian writers to examine their own societies, and to discard Eurocentric preconceptions and literary conventions.

"[6] The Beacon is among the local publications regarded as pivotal to the emergence of Caribbean literature in English, alongside BIM and Kyk-Over-Al, both founded in the 1940s.

[7] New Beacon Books in London, which was the first Caribbean publishing house in England, founded in 1966 by John La Rose and Sarah White, was named after the journal.