AustLit logo

AustLit

Dorothy Drain Dorothy Drain i(A20782 works by)
Born: Established: 1909 ; Died: Ceased: 1996
Gender: Female
The material on this page is available to AustLit subscribers. If you are a subscriber or are from a subscribing organisation, please log in to gain full access. To explore options for subscribing to this unique teaching, research, and publishing resource for Australian culture and storytelling, please contact us or find out more.

Works By

Preview all
1 Christmas, They Say i "Christmas, they say, should be white, with the holly growing", Dorothy Drain , 1995 single work poetry
— Appears in: The Oxford Book of Australian Women's Verse 1995; (p. 72-73)
1 Shakespearean Summary for Young Students i "MACBETH was urged to use a dagger", Dorothy Drain , 1988 single work poetry humour
— Appears in: The Illustrated Treasury of Australian Humour 1988; (p. 157)
1 Gardens Are Lovesome Things or Are They? i "I sometimes think that the balladises, who sing in a garden's praise", Dorothy Drain , 1950 single work poetry humour
— Appears in: The Australian Women's Weekly , 1 April 1950; The Bulletin , 14 June vol. 103 no. 5369 1983; (p. 87)
1 29 y separately published work icon The Australian Women's Weekly George Warnecke (editor), Alice Jackson (editor), Esme Fenston (editor), Dorothy Drain (editor), Ita Buttrose (editor), Dawn Swain (editor), Richard Walsh (editor), Jennifer Rowe (editor), Nene King (editor), Deborah Thomas (editor), 1933 Sydney : Australian Consolidated Press , Z925911 1933 periodical (212 issues)

Founded by George Warnecke and R. C. Packer and designed with the assistance of John Hill and the cartoonist William Ernest Pidgeon, the Australian Women's Weekly began in a newspaper format in June 1933. At first only available in New South Wales, it soon became so popular that editions were introduced to all states. By 1937, a New Zealand edition was also being produced.

Aimed at the home maker, the Australian Women's Weekly has provided information and entertainment to several generations of Australian women. The frequent notion in articles and fiction (especially in the 1940s and 1950s) that matrimony was the fulfillment of a woman's life and that such a life was subservient to the male bread-winner has been scrutinised by feminist critics in recent decades. Several book-length studies and many articles have been produced that explore the social dynamics that can be inferred by the content of the magazine in its long history.

Fiction was a large component of the magazine in its early years, but that has diminished markedly since the early 1970s. Issues from the 1930s contained lively debates in letters and articles about the value of literature, and many poets and fiction writers were profiled. A series on 'Famous Women' included biographies of George Eliot, Aphra Behn, Elizabeth Barrett Browning and Harriet Beecher Stowe.

The magazine began a long series of condensed novels in October 1934, exposing readers to many overseas writers and a number of local products such as Frank Dalby Davison, Henrietta Drake-Brockman and E. V. Timms. Around 250 novels had appeared in condensed form by 1940. In the 1940s the Weekly also distributed a series of illustrated children's books by non-Australian authors, published by The Shakespeare Head press, under the series title, Australian Women's Weekly Children's Classics. Titles in the series included Fairy Bluebell and Rosamond by Elizabeth Keith and Dandy Lion by Percy G. Griggs.

In July 1952, an author profile and a condensed version of F. Scott Fitzgerald's The Great Gatsby was included. Readers continued to receive encouragement throughout the 1950s and 1960s with competitions, quizzes, advertisements and information about book clubs. Since 1970, the Australian Women's Weekly has continued to publish short stories and occasional poetry. The magazine has been a major sponsor of the Byron Bay Writers Festival since 2000.

Since 1970, the Australian Women's Weekly has undergone several changes of format and has included less conventional issues for the magazine such as contraception, sex and the environment. The Australian Women's Weekly remains one of the most dominant popular magazines for women in Australia, maintaining one of the world's highest circulations per capita.

X