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Newspaper history

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Ross Harvey's interest
in the history of newspapers began when he was employed to carry out a
survey of the holdings of newspapers in New Zealand's libraries,
museums, archives, historical societies and libraries. This was
published in 1987 as Union List of Newspapers Preserved in Libraries, Newspaper Offices, Local Authority Offices and Museums in New Zealand.
Harvey's earlier
research into newspaper history focussed on gaining a better
understanding of the reasons why and circumstances in which New
Zealand's early newspaper - those published before around 1900 - were
published. He was concerned that historians were not using early
newspapers appropriately because they did not fully appreciate
the conditions in which these newspapers were produced and the reasons
why they were issued. Articles which have resulted from this theme
include: |
- Harvey, R. (1988). 'Joseph Ivess: "Celebrated Country Newspaper Propagator"', Turnbull Library Record, v21 no1: 5-28.
- Harvey, R. (1993). 'Formula for Success: Economic Aspects of the Nineteenth-Century New Zealand Press', in An Index of Civilisation: Studies of Printing and Publishing History in Honour of Keith Maslen,
ed. R. Harvey, W. Kirsop and B.J. McMullin (Melbourne: Centre for
Bibliographical and Textual Studies, Monash University), pp. 207-222.
- Harvey, R. (1996). 'The Power of the Press in Colonial New Zealand: More Imagined than Real?', Bibliographical Society of Australia and New Zealand Bulletin, v20 no2: 130-145.
- Harvey, R. (1997). 'Newspapers' in Book & Print in New Zealand: A Guide to Print Culture in Aotearoa ed. P. Griffith, R. Harvey, K. Maslen (Wellington: Victoria University Press), pp. 128-136.
Later research attempted to place early New Zealand
newspapers in a wider context. The role they played in the imperial
press system and networks is examined in:
- Harvey, R. (1999). 'Peripatetic Pressmen: Some Trans-Tasman Connections in the Book Trade' in The Culture of the Book: Essays from Two Hemispheres in Honour of Wallace Kirsop ed. (Melbourne: Bibliographical Society of Australia and New Zealand), pp. 410-418.
- Harvey, R. (2003). 'Sources of "Literary" Copy for New Zealand Newspapers', Bibliographical Society of Australia & New Zealand Bulletin, v27 nos3-4: 83-93.
- Harvey, R. (2006).
‘A ‘Sense of Common Citizenship’?: Mrs Potts of
Reefton, New Zealand, Communicates With the Empire’, in Media and
the British Empire, ed C. Kaul (London: Palgrave Macmillan), pp.
190-204.
More
recently he has started to investigate connections between the
Australia and New Zealand press. Two papers presented at the 2005
Australian Media Traditions conference describe this theme in more
detail:
- Cryle, Denis. 'The
ebb and flow of the Tasman mediasphere: A century of Australian and New
Zealand print media development, 1840–1940', Australian Media Traditions Conference: Politics Media History, Canberra, 24-25 November 2005.
- Harvey, Ross.
‘When media histories collide: Researching the development of
print media in Australia and New Zealand, 1840–1940’, Australian Media Traditions Conference: Politics Media History, Canberra, 24-25 November 2005.
Ross
Harvey has also maintained an interest in the Federal Standard
(Chiltern), a newspaper established in Chiltern (North-east Victoria)
in 1859. This newspaper closed in 1970 and the property is currently
owned by the National Trust of Australia. He has published articles
about the Federal Standard, one of which is:
- Harvey, R. (1999). 'The Federal Standard Story', Bibliographical Society of Australia and New Zealand Bulletin, v23 no4: 259-268.
This page was last updated on 18 July 2008
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