An icon of internationalism: The globe on Fortune covers, from 1933 onward

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The globe is a potent symbol, and one that can mean very different things in dif- ferent eras. Fortune has often used the motif—fittingly, perhaps, for the magazine founded in 1929 by Henry Luce, a globalist before that term came into vogue. His famous 1941 essay “The American Century” laid out an idealistic vision of a global era dominated by a nation only recently freed from colonialism—flawed yet aspirational in its democracy, and rich with
the promise of a “more abundant life,” both materially and culturally. Luce’s worldview has been reflected on dozens of our covers, as rep- resented in this selection, curated by Fortune creative director Josue Evilla. From the 1933 line drawing of the goddess Fortuna lovingly cradling the globe to the Bauhaus starkness of Walter Allner’s 1957 depiction of global trade to the ­Rubik’s Cube–like metal globe on the 2015 cover announcing our first Change the World list, Luce’s humane internationalism lives on.

January 1933. Cover by T.M. Cleland.
October 1944. Cover by Peter Piening.
August 1965. Cover by Eugene Olson.
February 1967. Cover by Walter Allner.
August 1975. Cover by Robert Crandall.
Europe-March 2007. Cover by Jon Valk.
September 2015. Photography by The Voorhees, typography by Sinelab.
Introducing the 2025 Fortune 500, the definitive ranking of the biggest companies in America. Explore this year’s list.

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