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Cover image courtesy of publisher.
Issue Details: First known date: 2013... 2013 Always Almost Modern : Australian Print Cultures and Modernity
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Contents

* Contents derived from the Melbourne, Victoria,:Australian Scholarly Publishing , 2013 version. Please note that other versions/publications may contain different contents. See the Publication Details.
Weird Scribblings on the Beach : Originality and Belatedness in Australian Cultural Discourse, David Carter , single work criticism (p. 1-12)
Critics, Writers, Intellectuals : Australian Literature and Its Criticism, David Carter , single work criticism
David Carter 'describes the background to [the] "theoretical turn" in Australian literary studies: the struggle to establish Australian literature in the university: the institutionalisation of Australian literary studies... the emergence of counter currents: and the belated impact of post—structuralist theories—not least via the rapid impact of cultural studies since the early 1980s.' Source: Modern Australian Criticism and Theory (2010)
(p. 13-44)
'Esprit de Nation' and Popular Modernity : Aussie Magazine 1920-1931, David Carter , single work criticism

'This article examines the intersection of the populist nationalism and popular modernity in Aussie (1920-1931), a commercial magazine of opinion, review and entertainment that flourished in Sydney between the wars. Aussie has been overlooked in comparison to its better-known contemporaries Smith's Weekly and the Bulletin, despite occupying the same public-commercial sphere and same discursive space as those magazines.

Aussie had a significant past as the main soldiers' paper of the First World War; in its post-war format it built a sizeable circulation on both sides of the Tasman; and for more than a decade it published the major Australian writers and cartoonists of the day. This article seeks not only to restore the magazine to its position as a significant player in the print culture of its period but also to use this case study to explore methodological questions about the historical interpretation of magazines as complex texts and the nature of Australian modernity. In particular it explores the gap between the nationalist editorial platform of the magazine and the investment in new forms of consumer and gender modernity found elsewhere in its pages. The magazine's ambivalence towards the modern was institutional, not merely ideological, a function of its position in a modernising print marketplace'. Source: David Carter.

(p. 67-80)
'Screamers in Bedlam' : Vision 1923-24, David Carter , single work criticism (p. 89-111)
Paris, Moscow, Melbourne: Some Avant-Garde Australian Little Magazines, 1930-1934, David Carter , single work criticism (p. 112-127)
The Mystery of the Missing Middlebrow, or, The C(o)urse of Good Taste, David Carter , single work criticism (p. 128-152)
'Some Means of Learning of the Best New Books' : All About Books and the Modern Reader, David Carter , single work criticism
The article proposes a rethinking of the notion of the middle-brow in terms of the proliferation of 'new books' in the interwar period, through an analysis of the review journal All About Books.
(p. 153-166)
Realism, Documentary, Socialist Realism Documenting and Criticising Society, David Carter , single work criticism (p. 167-185)
Note: With title: Realism, Documentary, Socialist Realism
'Current History Looks Apocalyptic' : Barnard Eldershaw, Utopia and the Literary Intellectual, 1930s-1940s, David Carter , single work criticism (p. 186-201)
Communism and Carnival : Ralph de Boissiere's Crown Jewel and Its Australian Context, David Carter , single work criticism (p. 202-214)
O'Grady, John see 'Culotta, Nino' : Popular Authorship, Duplicity and Celebrity, David Carter , single work criticism (p. 215-231)
The Wide Brown Land on the Silver Screen, David Carter , single work criticism
Analyses representations of land and nature in Australian cinema and television, with a focus on the significant changes from the 1980s in the kind of landscape and nature which most fully signify the nation and in their complex, politically volatile engagements with Aboriginality.
(p. 232-252)
Good Readers and Good Citizens : Literature, Media and the Nation, David Carter , single work criticism (p. 253-272)
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