y separately published work icon Australasian Journal of Popular Culture periodical issue   peer reviewed assertion
Issue Details: First known date: 2013... vol. 2 no. 2 2013 of The Australasian Journal of Popular Culture est. 2012 Australasian Journal of Popular Culture
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Notes

  • Contents indexed selectively.

Contents

* Contents derived from the 2013 version. Please note that other versions/publications may contain different contents. See the Publication Details.
Pornography in the Service of Lesbians : The Case of Wicked Women and Slit Magazines, Margaret Henderson , single work criticism
'This article analyses the Australian lesbian sex magazines, Wicked Women (1988-1996) and Slit (2002-) to examine the nature and shape of Australian lesbian pornography magazines, and hence to explore the ways in which these publications put pornography in the service of lesbians. I outline the conditions of these magazines' emergence, and then discuss the representational strategies of each, including imagery, layout, tropes and narratives. These magazines and their changing modes of making lesbian porn, show the development of a lesbian porn aesthetic. Further, they offer a unique sight of the discursive construction of lesbian identities and communities across more than three decades, and reveal another facet of the troubled relationship between feminism and lesbians.' (Author's abstract 159)
(p. 159-182)
Australians and the Pacific Rim : The Contested Past in the Popular Fiction of Di Morrissey, Rebecca Ling , single work criticism
'Former print and television journalist Di Morrissey is Australia's biggest-selling writer of popular fiction. Her novels incrementally construct an Australia re-shaped for the new century through the interplay of significant social forces and demographic shifts. Her imaginary also places Australian culture within a global network of affiliations generated by the colonial and imperial past, as well as by more recent strategic alliances, and encompasses some of the darker elements of Australia's collective inheritance. The critical reception of Morrissey's work, however, has hitherto been scant and dismissive. Yet the Pacific Rim novels - Tears of the Moon, Scatter the Stars, Kimberley Sun, Monsoon, and The Plantation - can be read within perspectives afforded by dark tourism research and theories of cognitive dissonance, revealing that they subvert widely received understandings of Australia's relationships within the Pacific region and constitute a subliminal force for public education.' (Author's abstract 211)
(p. 211-220)
Untitled, James Bennett , single work review
— Review of Diasporas of Australian Cinema 2009 anthology criticism ;
(p. 307-308)

Publication Details of Only Known VersionEarliest 2 Known Versions of

Last amended 17 Sep 2018 09:08:01
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