AustLit
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Notes
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RANGE: No.1 (Monday, 11 September, 1922) - 7 October, 1990
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FREQUENCY : Daily
Publication Details of Only Known VersionEarliest 2 Known Versions of
Works about this Work
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In the Wake of War : The Rise and Rise of Australia's Media Since 1918
2008
single work
criticism
— Appears in: Making Australian History : Perspectives on the Past Since 1788 2008; (p. 375-381)'Lost in the traditional stories of Depression and unemployment is the extraordinary technological and media revolution that was taking place in Australia of the interwar years. For it was in these years that we now find the origins of the great media empires of the twentieth century: the house of Murdoch and Packer. It saw, too, the birth of widespread radio technology and the iconic Australian serial, The Australian Women's Weekly. Indeed, as Bridget Griffen-Foley demonstrates here, the 1920s and 1930s were far from being just an age of economic hardship. Rather, this was perhaps the first period in Australian history in which most citizens were afforded the opportunity to experience extraordinary new communications technology.'
- y Keith Murdoch : Founder of a Media Empire Pymble : HarperCollins Australia , 2003 Z1086274 2003 single work biography
- y Keith Murdoch : Founder of a Media Empire Pymble : HarperCollins Australia , 2003 Z1086274 2003 single work biography
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In the Wake of War : The Rise and Rise of Australia's Media Since 1918
2008
single work
criticism
— Appears in: Making Australian History : Perspectives on the Past Since 1788 2008; (p. 375-381)'Lost in the traditional stories of Depression and unemployment is the extraordinary technological and media revolution that was taking place in Australia of the interwar years. For it was in these years that we now find the origins of the great media empires of the twentieth century: the house of Murdoch and Packer. It saw, too, the birth of widespread radio technology and the iconic Australian serial, The Australian Women's Weekly. Indeed, as Bridget Griffen-Foley demonstrates here, the 1920s and 1930s were far from being just an age of economic hardship. Rather, this was perhaps the first period in Australian history in which most citizens were afforded the opportunity to experience extraordinary new communications technology.'
Has serialised
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The Gold Stealers : A Story of Australian Boyhood on the Goldfields
The Gold-Stealers : A Story of Waddy,
single work
children's fiction
children's
adventure
In this humorous story Dicky Haddon and his school friends play at being bushrangers and expose a bogus superintendent of the local Sunday School.