Cover date refers to the date displayed on the covers of
periodical publications such as
magazines and
comic books. However, this is not necessarily the true date of
publication. Also, for some publications, the cover date may not actually be found on the
cover, but rather on an inside jacket or on an interior page.
Magazines
In the
United States,
Canada, and the
United Kingdom, the standard practice is to display on magazine covers a date which is some weeks or months in the future from the actual publishing/release date. There are two reasons for this discrepancy: first, to allow magazines to continue appearing "current" to
consumers even after they have been on sale for some time (since not all magazines will be sold immediately), and second, to inform newsstands when an unsold magazine can be removed from the stands and returned to the
publisher or be destroyed.
Weeklies (such as
Time and
Newsweek) are generally dated a week ahead. Monthlies (such as
National Geographic Magazine) are generally dated a month ahead, and quarterlies are generally dated three months ahead.
In other countries, the cover date usually matches more closely the date of publication, and may indeed be identical where weekly magazines are concerned.
In all markets, it is rare for monthly magazines to indicate a particular day of the month: thus issues are dated
May 2005, and so on, whereas weekly magazines may be dated
17 May 2005.
Comic books
The general practice of most mainstream
comic book companies since the creation of the comic book in the 1930s was to date individual issues putting the name of a month (and much later the year as well) on the cover which was generally two months after the actual release date. For example, a 1951 issue of
Superman which had the cover date of July would have been published two months earlier from that date in the month of May, generally speaking. In 1973 the discrepancy between the cover date and the publishing date went from two months to three months. In 1989 the cover date and publishing date discrepancy was changed back to two months, though generally each comic book company now uses its own system.
Of the two major American comic book publishers,
DC Comics continues to put cover dates on the
cover.
Marvel Comics, however, in October 1999 stopped putting cover dates on the cover; instead, the "cover" date was moved to the
copyright fine print on an interior page.
Category:MagazinesCategory:TimekeepingCategory:Comics terminology