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Juice (Australian magazine) Limelight; Music Feeds; Resident Advisor; Rip It Up (1989-2016) Roadrunner (Australian music magazine) Rock Australia Magazine (RAM) (1975-1989) Rolling Stone Australia; Stealth magazine (1999-2007) The Alternative Gig Guide; The Music (magazine) The Music Network; Time Off; Triple J Magazine
Nexus is an Australian-based bi-monthly alternative news magazine. It covers geopolitics and conspiracy theories; health issues, including alternative medicine; future science; the unexplained, including UFOs; Big Brother; and historical revisionism. The magazine also publishes articles about freedom of speech and thought, and related issues ...
Pages in category "Alternative magazines" The following 69 pages are in this category, out of 69 total. ... Nexus (Australian magazine) O. Only (magazine) P.
The Australian magazine was published until 1969 and the British version until 1973. The central editor, throughout the magazine's life in both countries, was Richard Neville. Co-editors of the Sydney version were Richard Walsh and Martin Sharp. Co-editors of the London version were Jim Anderson and, later, Felix Dennis, and then Roger ...
See Magazine, Edmonton (ended 2011) Syracuse New Times, Syracuse, New York; Urban Tulsa Weekly, Tulsa, Oklahoma and surrounding areas (1991–2013) The Real Paper, Cambridge, Massachusetts (1972–1981) The Vancouver Voice, Vancouver, Washington (ended 2011) The Valley Beat, Allentown, Pennsylvania (ended 2015)
The Digger was an alternative magazine published in Australia between August 1972 and December 1975. [1] It was established by Phillip Frazer, Bruce Hanford, and Jon Hawkes.. Notable contributors included Ron Cobb, Ian McCausland, Bob Daly, Patrick Cook, Beatrice Faust, Ponch Hawkes, Helen Garner, Michael Leunig, Anne Summers, Neil McLean, and Phil Pind
Arena is an independent Australian critical and radical publishing cooperative that has been continuously producing writings since its founding in 1963. Established by figures in Australia’s ‘New Left’, Arena is a forum to debate and develop new ideas about society and the world, occupying a unique place in Australian cultural and intellectual life ever since. [1]
Originally a small magazine, printed and distributed locally in Melbourne, it was first published by the Alternative Energy Co-operative (subsequently renamed the Alternative Technology Association, and now also known as Renew) in 1980 as Soft Technology: Alternative Energy in Australia. Although it sold for a cover price of only 85 cents, the ...