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Posts by Kristin Demetrious

Thanks for this JAS - very excited to see our interdisciplinary research into Australia’s rich political history now handsomely in print - we had a great experience publishing with this journal!

7 months ago 1 0 1 0
Screenshot of journal article. Title: “What Australia Thinks”: Richard Casey, Earl Newsom and Australia’s Early Embrace of US Public Relations. Authors: Kristin Demetrious, Deakin University, and David Lowe, Deakin University. Abstract: In 1940, wartime Prime Minister Robert Menzies established Australia’s first foreign legation to Washington DC, appointing his political rival, Richard Gardiner Casey, a move that marked a turning point in the importation of US public relations. This article examines formative exchanges between Casey, one of the Liberal Party’s most senior and capable members, and US public relations figure Earl Newsom, who authored a confidential report for Casey into overcoming American uninterest in, and ignorance of, Australia. Drawing on the Earl Newsom papers, we argue that Casey’s alliance with Newsom increased the visibility of Australian news in the United States; activated a bevy of cultural and travel relationships; and was conducted in a way to avoid the unpalatable taint of propaganda. Casey’s mission was contextualised by a political battle between US media industry players and democratic reformists and had ongoing implications for Australian political communication, separate from the histories of advertising, magazine and film connections. This interdisciplinary case study sheds new light on the cultural, social, economic and political flows stemming from Australia’s embrace of United States public relations at a moment when other roads might have been taken.

Screenshot of journal article. Title: “What Australia Thinks”: Richard Casey, Earl Newsom and Australia’s Early Embrace of US Public Relations. Authors: Kristin Demetrious, Deakin University, and David Lowe, Deakin University. Abstract: In 1940, wartime Prime Minister Robert Menzies established Australia’s first foreign legation to Washington DC, appointing his political rival, Richard Gardiner Casey, a move that marked a turning point in the importation of US public relations. This article examines formative exchanges between Casey, one of the Liberal Party’s most senior and capable members, and US public relations figure Earl Newsom, who authored a confidential report for Casey into overcoming American uninterest in, and ignorance of, Australia. Drawing on the Earl Newsom papers, we argue that Casey’s alliance with Newsom increased the visibility of Australian news in the United States; activated a bevy of cultural and travel relationships; and was conducted in a way to avoid the unpalatable taint of propaganda. Casey’s mission was contextualised by a political battle between US media industry players and democratic reformists and had ongoing implications for Australian political communication, separate from the histories of advertising, magazine and film connections. This interdisciplinary case study sheds new light on the cultural, social, economic and political flows stemming from Australia’s embrace of United States public relations at a moment when other roads might have been taken.

Let the 49.3 games begin!

First up, @kristindemetrious.bsky.social and Lowe examines the historical influence of US public relations on Australian practice and its ongoing legacies in Australian political communication.

#AusUSrelations #OpenAccess #auspol #PublicRelations

tinyurl.com/3tjps2b2

7 months ago 3 2 1 0
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ICA 2025 - Denver, USA. Finally got a good pic of this art installation! Says it all.

9 months ago 2 0 0 0
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“What Australia Thinks”: Richard Casey, Earl Newsom and Australia’s Early Embrace of US Public Relations In 1940, wartime Prime Minister Robert Menzies established Australia’s first foreign legation to Washington DC, appointing his political rival, Richard Gardiner Casey, a move that marked a turning ...

url6649.tandfonline.com/ls/click?upn...

9 months ago 0 0 0 0

New Interdisciplinary article with David Lowe on media histories. A US style ‘PR Plan’ commissioned by the Australian government at the beginning of WW2 was designed to never be seen. It brought a whole new political language to our shores, setting the tenor and style for decades to come.

9 months ago 4 0 0 0
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What’s Happening to Reading? For many people, A.I. may be bringing the age of traditional text to an end.

Will reading become obsolete? How A.I. could transform our relationship to the written word.

10 months ago 919 254 476 242
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Congratulations to the whole Albanese team!

11 months ago 0 0 0 0

Very good Margaret👏👏

1 year ago 1 0 0 0
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the May 2025 editorial is online @alenkajelen.bsky.social @kristindemetrious.bsky.social & I call on PR scholars to be ‘troublemakers’

1 year ago 0 2 0 0

Good photo too

1 year ago 0 0 0 0

Not sure where you’re going with all these little vids - okay - but if you really want to shake the apple tree on energy build a grand, interconnected story arc for Australians - ‘our future renewed’ type thing - powered by a movement of industry, culture and leadership. Australian exceptionalism!

1 year ago 1 0 0 0

Strong message here but don’t forget the great story Australia has to tell about being a renewable energy superpower. The future. That’s power.

1 year ago 1 0 0 0

Hummm. It used to be that exposing a the mechanics of a political strategy was a guaranteed deal-breaker for the public. But here’s CP putting the PR cards on the table. One can only assume he doesn’t think people will care and it won’t affect their electoral chances. I guess we’ll see.

1 year ago 0 0 0 0

Not bad Chris! Message received. And odd that a party that stands for ‘the market economy’ free of government intervention is defying that by asking taxpayers to stump up the $$$s to build their nuclear power plants. Go figure.

1 year ago 2 0 0 0

You don’t.

1 year ago 0 0 0 0

@katharinawolf.bsky.social
Hello K! Good to (virtually) see you! Kate has stated a Critical PR group - hers the link go.bsky.app/ALfzHKL

1 year ago 4 0 1 0

here’s the #CriticalPR link go.bsky.app/ALfzHKL

1 year ago 5 2 3 1
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L’Etang-Pieczka award outstanding PRI paper of the year: 2024 shortlist - Kristin Demetrious, Kate Fitch, Alenka Jelen, 2024

exciting news! we have launched the L’Etang-Pieczka Award to recognise innovative, critical, creative and boundary-pushing public relations scholarship journals.sagepub.com/doi/10.1177/...

1 year ago 7 2 1 0
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I know how you feel. Making sense of chaos gives at least a semblance of control.

1 year ago 0 0 0 0

Key figure has a a somewhat Mordigliani composure …

1 year ago 1 0 0 0
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A bit disconcerting when one of the world's largest moth species is attracted to your headlamp! Found this beautiful Hercules Moth in far north Queensland.

#wildoz #wildlife #nature #biodiversity #insects

1 year ago 2913 456 148 61

Joining BlueSky today!

1 year ago 7 0 1 0