This article explores the possibility of renewing the comparative study of Canadian and Australian literatures through an alertness to parallel developments in mid-range magazines and middlebrow print cultures in Canada and Australia in the early- to mid-twentieth century. While coping the possibilities of full-fledged comparative studies, its focus is a case study of the Australian magazine BP: a well-capitalized, plush, up-market publication of the Australian steamship company Burns Philp. The BP Magazine promoted travel between 1928 and 1942 as the nation underwent a transition from settler colonialism to vernacular modernity. The magazine lays bare tensions between literary aspiration and commodity culture, sophistication and escapis...
This article reviews the illustration history of Australian periodicals to place modern illustrated ...
As travel began to massify in the aftermath of the Great War when passenger ships still regularly st...
In the interwar period, the Pacific Ocean was crisscrossed by hundreds of passenger liners, and isla...
This article explores the possibility of renewing the comparative study of Canadian and Australian l...
In the early twentieth century, new technologies of media, communication, and transportation opened ...
A century ago, the golden age of magazine publishing coincided with the beginning of a golden age of...
In the 1920s and 1930s, glossy, quality magazines brought a flair of cosmopolitanism, glamour and ex...
This book announces a new cross-cultural approach to periodical studies, reading both French- and En...
This special section considers the interconnections of print culture and mobility across the Pacific...
In the interwar period, increasingly mobile Australians began to contemplate travel across the Pacif...
This article applies recent scholarship concerned with transatlantic mobility and print cultures to ...
The presence in Australia of English and American magazines has not attracted significant critical a...
As travel began to massify in the aftermath of the Great War when passenger ships still regularly st...
Longstanding meta-narratives about modernity and modernism have not only neglected gender, as the ep...
Using two of Australia’s most prominent quality culture and leisure magazines of the 1920s and 1930...
This article reviews the illustration history of Australian periodicals to place modern illustrated ...
As travel began to massify in the aftermath of the Great War when passenger ships still regularly st...
In the interwar period, the Pacific Ocean was crisscrossed by hundreds of passenger liners, and isla...
This article explores the possibility of renewing the comparative study of Canadian and Australian l...
In the early twentieth century, new technologies of media, communication, and transportation opened ...
A century ago, the golden age of magazine publishing coincided with the beginning of a golden age of...
In the 1920s and 1930s, glossy, quality magazines brought a flair of cosmopolitanism, glamour and ex...
This book announces a new cross-cultural approach to periodical studies, reading both French- and En...
This special section considers the interconnections of print culture and mobility across the Pacific...
In the interwar period, increasingly mobile Australians began to contemplate travel across the Pacif...
This article applies recent scholarship concerned with transatlantic mobility and print cultures to ...
The presence in Australia of English and American magazines has not attracted significant critical a...
As travel began to massify in the aftermath of the Great War when passenger ships still regularly st...
Longstanding meta-narratives about modernity and modernism have not only neglected gender, as the ep...
Using two of Australia’s most prominent quality culture and leisure magazines of the 1920s and 1930...
This article reviews the illustration history of Australian periodicals to place modern illustrated ...
As travel began to massify in the aftermath of the Great War when passenger ships still regularly st...
In the interwar period, the Pacific Ocean was crisscrossed by hundreds of passenger liners, and isla...