
Assam's iconic children's magazines Mouchak and Notun Aabiskar, which have nurtured generations with storytelling and scientific curiosity since 1984, have been digitally archived at the University of California. This initiative, part of a collaboration with Tezpur University, preserves all published editions to support international research on Assamese children's literature. Editor Shantanu Tamuli highlighted the magazines' rich content and ongoing academic interest, including doctoral studies in India.
The articles present a cultural and academic development without political framing. They focus on the collaboration between educational institutions and the literary significance of the magazines, reflecting perspectives from editors and scholars. There is no evident political bias, as coverage centers on heritage preservation and research facilitation.
The tone across the articles is positive and celebratory, emphasizing the magazines' longstanding influence and the significance of their digital preservation. The coverage highlights pride in Assamese literary traditions and optimism about future academic research, without critical or negative elements.
Each source's own headline, political lean, and sentiment — so you can see framing differences at a glance.
| Source | Their headline | Bias | Sentiment |
|---|---|---|---|
| northeastnow | Assam's iconic children's magazines Mouchak, Notun Aabiskar enter University of California's digital archives | Center | Positive |
| theassamtribune | Assam's iconic Mouchak, Notun Aabiskar enter California varsity digital archives | Center | Positive |
theassamtribune broke this story on 24 May, 10:31 am. Other outlets followed.
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