Conceptualizing the 1920s and 30s as an historical era of new media, we explore how leisure and culture magazines vied for consumer and cultural capital alongside other media platforms that they featured and reviewed, thus crossing and constructing hierarchies of value. In Part One, we advance a conceptual discussion that brings together explorations of colonialism and modernity to consider the Pacific basin as a region captured by rapidly expanding and internationalizing mass media. We introduce Madianou and Miller’s theory of polymedia to focus on how magazines function as an “integrated structure” featuring different media of varying cultural value. Using their framework, we consider magazines published on the Pacific basin as hosts of c...
This essay introduces the a collection of articles in a special issue focused upon ‘Media, Culture a...
South Pacific media is generally projected as embracing Western news values with the ideals of "obje...
The presence in Australia of English and American magazines has not attracted significant critical a...
Conceptualizing the 1920s and 30s as an historical era of new media, we explore how leisure and cult...
In the interwar period, the Pacific Ocean was crisscrossed by hundreds of passenger liners, and isla...
This article describes the historic conditions governing newspaper and media ownership in the Pacifi...
In the 1920s and 1930s, glossy, quality magazines brought a flair of cosmopolitanism, glamour and ex...
As travel began to massify in the aftermath of the Great War when passenger ships still regularly st...
In the early twentieth century, new technologies of media, communication, and transportation opened ...
As travel began to massify in the aftermath of the Great War when passenger ships still regularly st...
In the interwar period, increasingly mobile Australians began to contemplate travel across the Pacif...
This special section considers the interconnections of print culture and mobility across the Pacific...
This article describes the historic conditions governing newspaper and media ownership in the Pacifi...
Using two of Australia’s most prominent quality culture and leisure magazines of the 1920s and 1930...
For so long figured in European discourses as the antithesis of modernity, the Pacific Islands have ...
This essay introduces the a collection of articles in a special issue focused upon ‘Media, Culture a...
South Pacific media is generally projected as embracing Western news values with the ideals of "obje...
The presence in Australia of English and American magazines has not attracted significant critical a...
Conceptualizing the 1920s and 30s as an historical era of new media, we explore how leisure and cult...
In the interwar period, the Pacific Ocean was crisscrossed by hundreds of passenger liners, and isla...
This article describes the historic conditions governing newspaper and media ownership in the Pacifi...
In the 1920s and 1930s, glossy, quality magazines brought a flair of cosmopolitanism, glamour and ex...
As travel began to massify in the aftermath of the Great War when passenger ships still regularly st...
In the early twentieth century, new technologies of media, communication, and transportation opened ...
As travel began to massify in the aftermath of the Great War when passenger ships still regularly st...
In the interwar period, increasingly mobile Australians began to contemplate travel across the Pacif...
This special section considers the interconnections of print culture and mobility across the Pacific...
This article describes the historic conditions governing newspaper and media ownership in the Pacifi...
Using two of Australia’s most prominent quality culture and leisure magazines of the 1920s and 1930...
For so long figured in European discourses as the antithesis of modernity, the Pacific Islands have ...
This essay introduces the a collection of articles in a special issue focused upon ‘Media, Culture a...
South Pacific media is generally projected as embracing Western news values with the ideals of "obje...
The presence in Australia of English and American magazines has not attracted significant critical a...