y separately published work icon The Courier-Mail newspaper  
Date: 1933-1936
Date: 1933
Issue Details: First known date: 1933... 1933 The Courier-Mail
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.

Notes

    • Daily
    • Formed with the merger of the Brisbane Courier and the Daily Mail 28 August, 1933
    • Sunday edition known as The Sunday Mail
    • 20 June, 1846 - 11 May, 1861 - as the Moreton Bay Courier
    • 14 May, 1861 - 9 April, 1864 as the Courier
    • 11 April, 1864 - 26 August, 1933 as the Brisbane Courier
    • from 28 August, 1933 - as the Courier-Mail
  • From the Saturday 8-9 October 2011 edition the former ETC section became Life. 'Saturday Life is the must-have guide to what is happening in entertainment, travel and culture. Every Saturday, Life, now Queensland Life features reviews on the latest movies, books and music, local and overseas holiday destinations, and comment from columnists. ' Source: www.newsspace.com.au/couriermail/sections (Sighted 11/10.11).

Publication Details of Only Known VersionEarliest 2 Known Versions of

First known date: 1933
      Brisbane, Queensland,: .

Works about this Work

Colin Bingham, The Telegraph and Poetic Modernism in Brisbane between the Wars Patrick Buckridge , 2016 single work criticism
— Appears in: Queensland Review , vol. 23 no. 2 2016; (p. 151-163)
'Brisbane has sometimes been represented as a bulwark of literary traditionalism against the advances of poetic modernism in the southern capitals during the first half of the twentieth century. But as William Hatherell showed in The Third Metropolis, modernism had a brief but intense flourishing in the northern city during and immediately after World War II. This article traces the reception and practice of poetic modernism in Brisbane even earlier than that, in the period between the wars, both in the form of a vigorous critical debate over ‘modernistic poetry’ in the Courier-Mail and elsewhere, and also in the composition and publication of a significant quantity of self-consciously modernist poetry in Brisbane's evening daily, the Telegraph, with the active encouragement of the paper's literary editor, Colin Bingham, from 1930 to 1939.' (Introduction)
Here's the Write Stuff 2016 single work
— Appears in: The Courier-Mail , 12 September 2016; (p. 2)
'The Courier-Mail and The Sunday Mail dominated the state’s media awards at the weekend. The newspapers picked up 10 awards at Queensland’s Clarion Awards in Brisbane on Saturday night. ...'
Clouds of Rhetoric : Climate Change and the State of Australian Journalism Ben Eltham , 2011 single work criticism
— Appears in: Kill Your Darlings , October no. 7 2011; (p. 9-20)
Ben Eltham on News Limited and the future of quality Australian journalism.
In the Wake of War : The Rise and Rise of Australia's Media Since 1918 Bridget Griffen-Foley , 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.'

Paranoia, Surveillance and Literary Politics Ian Syson , 2004 single work criticism
— Appears in: Running Wild : Essays, Fictions and Memoirs Presented to Michael Wilding 2004; (p. 267-274)

Syson investigates the background to recent attempts by right-wing journalists, historians and intellectuals (mainly in Quadrant and the Courier-Mail) to discredit some former sympathisers with socialism and communism, such as Manning Clark and Henry Reynolds. This leads to a more general discussion of the representation of Australia's history, the role Quadrant, the CIA and the Australian Association for Cultural Freedom have played in it, and the continuing impact of the Cold War on Australian politics and culture.

Paranoia, Surveillance and Literary Politics Ian Syson , 2004 single work criticism
— Appears in: Running Wild : Essays, Fictions and Memoirs Presented to Michael Wilding 2004; (p. 267-274)

Syson investigates the background to recent attempts by right-wing journalists, historians and intellectuals (mainly in Quadrant and the Courier-Mail) to discredit some former sympathisers with socialism and communism, such as Manning Clark and Henry Reynolds. This leads to a more general discussion of the representation of Australia's history, the role Quadrant, the CIA and the Australian Association for Cultural Freedom have played in it, and the continuing impact of the Cold War on Australian politics and culture.

Our First Newspaper : A Courageous Venture Clem Lack , 1959 single work essay
— Appears in: The Courier-Mail , 8 June 1959; (p. 4)
Lack outlines the history of The Courier-Mail, formerly The Moreton Bay Courier and The Brisbane Courier.
The Courier-Mail Wharfie Jim Crawford , 1954 single work drama satire
In the Wake of War : The Rise and Rise of Australia's Media Since 1918 Bridget Griffen-Foley , 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.'

A Tale of Two Ships Jack O'Connor , 1985 single work short story adventure
— Appears in: Laughter and Tears from Up North 1985; (p. 27-38)
An ageing man recounts his story of how a visit to the National War Museum in Canberra, where he sees a model of the World War II troop carrier, Westralia, triggers memories of his childhood escapades.

PeriodicalNewspaper Details

ISSN: 1322-5235

Has serialised

Unfinished Business (from The Last Confession) Up in Smoke, Morris West , single work novel extract
Cattleman, R. S. Porteous , single work novel
Hurricane The Outpost, Rann Daly , single work novel
A Royal Abduction, Arthur W. Upfield , single work novel crime
During a state visit to Australia in 1928, Her Royal Highness Princess Natalie, heiress to the throne of Rolandia in Europe, is abducted from the transcontinental train at Cook on the Nullarbor Plain by a gang lead by American gangsters, Earle Lawrence and Van Horton. They hide her in caves near Eucla on the Great Australian Bight until the search is called off and ransom is arranged.
Murder on the Hog, Matthew Condon , single work novel crime
Last amended 8 Sep 2016 10:57:23
Newspapers:
    Powered by Trove
    X