In the interwar period, increasingly mobile Australians began to contemplate travel across the Pacific, both towards Asia as well as to America. Contemporary writing reflected this highly mobile culture and Pacific gaze, yet literary histories have overlooked this aspect of cultural history. Instead of looking to Australian novels as indexes of culture, as literary studies often do, this article explores the range of writing and print culture in magazines, concentrating on notions of mobility through the Pacific. Its focus is on the quality magazines MAN and The Home, which addressed two distinct, gendered readerships, but operated within similar cultural segments. This article suggests that the distinct geographical imaginaries of these ma...
The presence in Australia of English and American magazines has not attracted significant critical a...
From the 1880s onwards, the Pacific Islands became increasingly accessible to the average Australian...
This article reviews the illustration history of Australian periodicals to place modern illustrated ...
In the interwar period, increasingly mobile Australians began to contemplate travel across the Pacif...
In the 1920s and 1930s, glossy, quality magazines brought a flair of cosmopolitanism, glamour and ex...
In the early twentieth century, new technologies of media, communication, and transportation opened ...
This special section considers the interconnections of print culture and mobility across the Pacific...
As travel began to massify in the aftermath of the Great War when passenger ships still regularly st...
Using two of Australia’s most prominent quality culture and leisure magazines of the 1920s and 1930...
As travel began to massify in the aftermath of the Great War when passenger ships still regularly st...
This article applies recent scholarship concerned with transatlantic mobility and print cultures to ...
This article explores the possibility of renewing the comparative study of Canadian and Australian l...
This special section considers the interconnections of print culture and mobility across the Pacific...
In the interwar period, the Pacific Ocean was crisscrossed by hundreds of passenger liners, and isla...
The presence in Australia of English and American magazines has not attracted significant critical a...
From the 1880s onwards, the Pacific Islands became increasingly accessible to the average Australian...
This article reviews the illustration history of Australian periodicals to place modern illustrated ...
In the interwar period, increasingly mobile Australians began to contemplate travel across the Pacif...
In the 1920s and 1930s, glossy, quality magazines brought a flair of cosmopolitanism, glamour and ex...
In the early twentieth century, new technologies of media, communication, and transportation opened ...
This special section considers the interconnections of print culture and mobility across the Pacific...
As travel began to massify in the aftermath of the Great War when passenger ships still regularly st...
Using two of Australia’s most prominent quality culture and leisure magazines of the 1920s and 1930...
As travel began to massify in the aftermath of the Great War when passenger ships still regularly st...
This article applies recent scholarship concerned with transatlantic mobility and print cultures to ...
This article explores the possibility of renewing the comparative study of Canadian and Australian l...
This special section considers the interconnections of print culture and mobility across the Pacific...
In the interwar period, the Pacific Ocean was crisscrossed by hundreds of passenger liners, and isla...
The presence in Australia of English and American magazines has not attracted significant critical a...
From the 1880s onwards, the Pacific Islands became increasingly accessible to the average Australian...
This article reviews the illustration history of Australian periodicals to place modern illustrated ...