Glover’s and Fairburn’s Inklings
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.26686/knznq.v0i0.794Abstract
Denis Glover and ARD Fairburn each contributed three items to the long defunct trade house magazine Inkling: 1947– 51. The significance of the publication to New Zealand printing industry is discussed. The influence of the two authors in proselytising improved client relations and adopting higher standards of typography is assessed in the context of the literary nationalism that emerged in the late 1930s. Inkling was also an important vehicle for the illustrator and cartoonist Robert Brett.
Lindsay Rollo, a retired one-time technical editor, is now an independent researcher.
Correspondence about this article may be directed to the author at lrollo@paradise.net.nz
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Published
2012-10-11
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