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''The Cane Toad Times'' was the name of a satirical humour magazine based in Brisbane, Queensland. It was first published in the late 1970s, then revived under the same name by a new team from 1983–1990. The two versions shared personnel and featured roughly the same counter-cultural philosophy, irreverent journalism, strident opinion and fondness for satire, cartoons and popular culture. The editors and contributors of ''The Cane Toad Times'' were motivated by opposition to political events and attitudes in Queensland under the Bjelke-Petersen Government (1968–1987). The first issue of ''The Cane Toad Times'' was published in May, 1977. During its publication, ''The Cane Toad Times'' was published more or less quarterly, with 22 issues divided between two collectives. The first collective (1977–1979) had 7 issues, while the second collective (1983–1990) had a total of 15 issues.〔 ==First collective (1977–1979)== The first edition appeared in May 1977 — the year of the Silver Jubilee of Elizabeth II, punk rock and the Sex Pistols’ ''‘God Save The Queen’''. The first cover featured a cane toad wearing the British royal crown. Originally a stapled quarterfold, the magazine assumed its eventual tabloid size by the fourth issue. "Cane Toad Times" was chosen as the name of the magazine because the founders wanted a mascot that represented Queensland ... part of the appeal of the toad was the element of repulsion it evoked, the feeling of fear and loathing that typified being young in the Bjelke-Petersen era.〔Jiggens, John "Personal Stories: Media Activism, The Cane Toad Times." Media Information Australia 55 (1990): 65–74.〕 Key writers in the original collective included John Jiggens, David Richards, Gerard Lee, Mirtek Pasciezny, Bing Di Mucci, Craig Munro, Bill Thorpe, Sue McLeod, Janice Knopke and Landon Watts. They teamed up with a group of cartoonists who produced 4ZZZ-FM’s ‘Radio Times’: Matt Mawson, Terry Murphy, Damien Ledwich and Ross Hinckley. Later additions to the collective included Flark March, Tim Low, Robbie Wyatt and Lillian Rosser.〔 Funds were raised by selling advertisements to local businesses in the counter-cultural scene and benefits featuring Brisbane bands including Razar, The Go-Betweens and The Riptides.〔 The editions of the first collective, not numbered at the time, were: # The Royal Cane Toad (May 1977)〔http://www.textqueensland.com.au/item/journal/ceb4ebe5516a7eaa98e67732c16d0414〕 # The Cane Toad goes to Mullumbimby (July 1977) # Giant Mutant Cane Toad (Sept/Oct 1977) # The Incredible Peanut (December 1977) # The Phantoad cover (April 1978) # From Behind the Peanut Curtain: Joh, Howard the Duck and Cane Toad (June 1978) # Juvenile Delinquency (June 1979) 〔 The first collective folded after a look-alike news magazine, ''Time Off'', with Matt Mawson doing layout, appeared in 1978.〔 While the core work of the magazine was a sustained satirical attack on Bjelke-Petersen and his police enforcers, it also celebrated seemingly mundane but often surprisingly exotic aspects of Queensland popular culture: giant roadside attractions, local speedway heroes, banana worship.〔Stockwell, Stephen. Alternative Media in Brisbane: 1965–1985. Queensland Review, Vol. 14, No. 1, 2007: 75–87〕 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「The Cane Toad Times」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
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