The last post? Tracking the Australasian to Aussie Post, 1864-2002


Autoria(s): Murphy, Wayne L.; Mitropolous, Maria
Data(s)

01/12/2002

Resumo

Aussie Post, the flagship of ocker Australiana, folded in January 2002. Post began life as the Australasian, a middlebrow magazine steeped in a nineteenth century civics of stable citizenship with a modicum of diversionary leisure. The transformation began when the Australasian became Australasian Post in 1946 under George Johnston's brief 15-week editorship. Johnston's idealistic vision of Post as a voice of post-war Australian modernity was soon overtaken by commercial imperatives as Post's identity wavered between its civic antecedents and a new low-brow populism, a niche it had finally settled into by the mid-1950s. This tension between staid civics and risqué populism shaped the magazine's long evolution into its final realisation of the pictorial general interest genre. This paper, based on a close examination of the magazines themselves, tracks Post's generic evolution and focuses on the struggle to redefine the magazine’s identity during the post-war period when the axis of Australian identity was reluctantly shifting from the staid traditions of Rule Britannia to the flashy modernity of Pax Americana.

Formato

application/pdf

Identificador

http://eprints.qut.edu.au/42508/

Publicador

Journalism Education Association of Australia Inc

Relação

http://eprints.qut.edu.au/42508/1/The_last_Post_%282002%29.pdf

http://jeaa.org.au/journal.htm

Murphy, Wayne L. & Mitropolous, Maria (2002) The last post? Tracking the Australasian to Aussie Post, 1864-2002. Australian Journalism Review, 24(2), pp. 133-149.

Direitos

Copyright 2002 Journalism Education Association of Australia Inc

Fonte

Creative Industries Faculty; Journalism, Media & Communication

Palavras-Chave #190301 Journalism Studies #The Australasian #Australasian Post #Aussie Post #Media history #Popular magazines #Popular culture #George Johnston
Tipo

Journal Article