Australian Women's Weekly: Difference between revisions
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|"[[Mandrake in Love]]" || #18/8-1939 || #25/11-1939 || | |"[[Mandrake in Love]]" || #18/8-1939 || #25/11-1939 || | ||
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|"[[Visitors | |"[[Visitors from Space]]" || #25/11-1939 || #10/2-1940 || | ||
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|"[[The Deep South]]" || #10/2-1940 || #1/6-1940 || | |"[[The Deep South]]" || #10/2-1940 || #1/6-1940 || |
Revision as of 16:05, 19 November 2011
The Australian Women's Weekly is an Australian monthly women's magazine published by ACP Magazines, a division of PBL Media based in Sydney. Audited circulation in 2009 exceeded 500,000 copies monthly, making it the largest magazine in Australia.
History
The magazine was started in 1933 by Frank Packer as a weekly publication. In 1982, publication frequency was reduced from weekly to monthly. "Weekly" was retained in the name for reasons of familiarity and the fact that Women's Monthly just sounded "unseemly". The final weekly edition was dated December 15, 1982, followed by the first monthly edition dated January, 1983.
The magazine is usually 240 pages long and printed on glossy paper trimmed to A4 page size. It typically contains feature articles about the modern Australian woman. For many years, it included a lift-out TV guide.
It became responsible for introducing Mandrake to Australian audiences, when it unveiled their new comic strip character on December 1, 1934. Mandrake quickly became one of the Weekly's most popular features - a feat no doubt helped by the magazine's policy of replacing any mentions of American place names and idioms with their Australian equivalents, thus persuading readers that Mandrake was, in fact, an Australian character.
Mandrake's peak of popularity coincided with World War Two. When the Weekly was forced to reduce its page count as a wartime paper rationing measure, Mandrake was dropped from the magazine for a week - before readers' protests prompted the Weekly to bring him back in the next issue!
Issue overview
Consolidated Press, publishers of the Weekly, produced two large black & white Mandrake the Magician comic books. Numbering up to 72 pages, these two comics were probably published between 1939-1941. Later in the 40s Consolidated Press printed three more issues of Mandrake the Magician.