Worldly tastes: mobility and the geographical imaginaries of interwar Australian magazines
Journal Publication ResearchOnline@JCUAbstract
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 magazines, which linked travel and geographical mobility with aspiration and social mobility, played a role in consolidating and nourishing the class standing of their readers, and revealed some of their attitudes toward gender and race.
Journal
Transfers
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N/A
Volume
7
ISBN/ISSN
2045-4821
Edition
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Issue
1
Pages Count
18
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Publisher
Berghahn Books
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EISSN
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DOI
10.3167/TRANS.2017.070105