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Australian Studies

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Title: Australian Studies


1
Australian Studies
  • Culture Attitudes, Beliefs Stereotypes

2
(No Transcript)
3
Culture of Australia
  • Australia is one of the most urbanised
    populations in the world the majority of
    Australians live on the coast.
  • Australia's cities are melting pots of different
    cultures.
  • The influence of the longer-established southern
    European communities in particular has been
    strong.

4
Culture of Australia
  • The post-World War II influx of both English and
    non English-speaking migrants from England,
    Scotland, Ireland, Wales, Italy, Greece, Germany,
    Yugoslavia, Bulgaria, Malta, Eastern Europe, the
    Middle East, East Asia and South-East Asia has
    had an impact.
  • Lesser numbers of immigrants have come from the
    African and American continents.

5
Culture of Australia
  • To understand its culture, the physical distances
    between settlements and the very centralised
    nature of those settlements within each state
    must be considered.

6
Attitudes, Beliefs Stereotypes
  • Australians have very strong attitudes and
    beliefs which are reinforced by the views of the
    country's society.

7
Attitudes, Beliefs Stereotypes
  • The Australian culture has been forged on the
    hardship of early settlers and later on the
    heroism of the Australian soldiers.
  • "Mateship", has been a central principle. This
    may also explain why the more aggressive forms of
    sport Rugby and Australian rules football are
    particularly popular in Australia.

8
Attitudes, Beliefs Stereotypes
  • Australians have a tendency for short forms of
    names.
  • e.g. Steven Stevo David Davo John Johnno
    Mosquito Mozzie Barbeque Barbie.

9
Attitudes, Beliefs Stereotypes
  • The phrase, "the lucky country", coined by Donald
    Horne, is used to describe Australia in terms of
    weather, lifestyle and history.
  • Ironically, Horne was actually using the term to
    criticise Australian society of the early-1960s .

10
Mateship
  • Mateship can be defined as the code of contact,
    particularly between men, although more recently
    also between men and women, stressing
    egalitarianism, equality and friendship.
  • Mateship is seen as an important element of the
    qualities that the Military values in its
    soldiers, sailors, airmen and officers.

11
Mateship
  • Mateship is an Australian cultural idiom that
    embodies equality, loyalty and friendship.
  • There are two types of mateship, the inclusive
    and the exclusive the inclusive is in relation
    to a shared situation (e.g., employment, sports,
    or hardship), whereas the exclusive type is
    toward a third party (e.g., a person that you
    have just met).

12
Mateship
  • Russel Ward, in The Australian Legend (1958), saw
    the concept as a central one to the Australian
    people.
  • Mateship derives from mate, meaning friend,
    commonly used in Australia as an friendly form of
    address.

13
Mateship
  • Mateship can also have negative qualities, such
    as loyalties over the law, and a word for
    corruption in the police and judiciary.
  • It has also drawn criticism as a term as it is
    synonymous with friendship, which is not an
    exclusively Australian concept.

14
The Australian Dream
  • The Australian Dream of home ownership underpins
    suburban Australia.

15
The Australian Dream
  • The Australian Dream or Great Australian Dream is
    a belief that in Australia, home ownership can
    lead to a better life and is an expression of
    success and security.
  • Although this standard of living is enjoyed by
    many in the Australian population, rising house
    prices compared to average wages are making it
    more difficult for many, especially those living
    in large cities.

16
The Australian Dream
  • It is also noted as having led to urbanisation
    (or more specifically suburbanisation), causing
    extensive urban sprawl in the major cities.
  • The concept of homeownership for all is also
    found in very similar terms in New Zealand, which
    shares many cultural and social values with its
    larger neighbour.

17
"Underdog" Identity
  • Australians have traditionally had a very strong
    "underdog" attitude, that they will support those
    who appear to be at a disadvantage unless
    Australia is in direct competition with another
    nation.

18
"Underdog" Identity
  • This can be seen greatly from occurrences during
    the 2003 Rugby World Cup, where the Georgian
    Rugby Team arrived in Perth with a crowd of Perth
    residents welcoming them with colourful support,
    and support for Eric the Eel during the 2000
    Olympics.
  • A similar occurrence was noted in Townsville,
    Queensland where the Japanese Rugby Team was
    preferred to that of the French.

19
"Underdog" Identity
  • This underdog attitude is most evident in sport,
    as sport is also a large part of Australian
    culture. Should an Australian be asked to choose
    between two unknown competitors, very often they
    will choose the one least likely to win.
  • The success of Steven Bradbury in the 2002 Winter
    Olympics has coined the expression 'doing a
    Bradbury' which underpins the very spirit of the
    underdog and a fine example positive thinking and
    never giving up.

20
"Underdog" Identity
  • There is however, another side to this underdog
    attitude in Australians.
  • This is the phenomenon of "cutting down the tall
    poppy", which reveals itself in many typically
    Australian attitudes.

21
"Underdog" Identity
  • As a result, Australians see themselves as being
    extremely critical of their political leaders and
    successful personalities, and always sympathetic
    to those who are 'being done wrong by' or in
    strife.
  • This is evident when viewing Today Tonight and A
    Current Affair, Australia's two major tabloid
    television programmes or listening to "talkback"
    radio.

22
Tall poppy syndrome
  • Tall Poppy Syndrome (TPS) is a negative term used
    in Australia and New Zealand to describe what is
    seen as a levelling social attitude.

23
Tall poppy syndrome
  • Someone is said to be a target of tall poppy
    syndrome when his or her assumption of a higher
    economic, social or political position is
    criticized as being presumptuous, attention
    seeking, or without merit.
  • Alternatively, it is seen as a societal
    phenomenon in which people of genuine merit are
    criticised or resented because their talents or
    achievements elevate them above or distinguish
    them from their peers.

24
A "Fair Go"
  • The belief in a "Fair Go" is a key part of
    Australian culture and often Australian Society.
  • Labour governments have often used this saying
    in advocating their policies and socialist
    ideals.
  • Unionism in Australia has also greatly benefited
    from this belief.

25
A "Fair Go"
  • This can be seen in the existence of strong
    public health and education systems in Australia.
  • It is an idea which involves everyone having an
    equal chance to achieve their goals.

26
Cultural Cringe
  • The idea of cultural cringe was defined by
    Australian sociologists and as the belief that
    one's own country occupies a "subordinate
    cultural place on the periphery", and that
    "intellectual standards are set and innovations
    occur elsewhere".
  • As a consequence, a person who holds this belief
    is inclined to devalue their own country's
    cultural, academic and artistic life, and to
    venerate the "superior" culture of another
    country.

27
Stories and legends
  • Australian stories and legends have a cultural
    significance quite independent of their empirical
    truth or falsehood.
  • This can be seen in the national obsession with
    the almost mythological portrayal of Ned Kelly as
    a Robin Hood figure of sorts.

28
Stories and legends
  • Australians, according to popular opinion, are
    relaxed, tolerant and easy-going and yet cling
    dearly to the fundamental importance of
    common-sense justice, or, to use the classic
    expression, a fair go.

29
Stories and legends
  • Australians, according to popular belief, make
    good sportsmen and soldiers.
  • Australia has shown, in the past and present,
    that for a country of just over 20 million
    people, it has achieved many extraordinary things
    on the sporting field, such as the 49 medals won
    at the 2004 Athens Olympic Games.
  • Militarily, Australians have served in wars,
    ranging from the Battle of Gallipoli through to
    East Timor and Iraq and Afghanistan

30
Stories and legends
  • Australian war culture is somewhat different than
    most other western cultures. It generally
    consists of sombre reflection and commemoration
    of all who have died in wartime and honouring
    those who lived.
  • It is generally agreed that the beginning of
    modern Australian warfare began at Gallipoli in
    World War I, where Australian forces under
    British command suffered a catastrophic defeat.

31
Stories and legends
  • The Australian experience at Gallipoli, which is
    viewed as the first iconic moment in modern
    Australian war involvement, is viewed by
    Australians with both pride for the fighting of
    the soldiers, and bitterness for the negligence
    on the part of the British.
  • The incidences of valour, bravery, and
    determination displayed during the campaign for
    Gallipoli is seen as part of the ANZAC spirit.
  • This experience of war was repeated at battles on
    the Western Front.

32
Stories and legends
  • The legend of Australians being great soldiers
    has its roots in the AIF being used during the
    latter part of the war as the shock troops of the
    British Empire forces.
  • Australians were considered to be remarkably
    determined, united and hard-working individuals.

33
Stories and legends
  • The majority of Australians knew how to ride and
    shoot prior to enlistment, making them good
    soldiers.
  • However, Australians also had a lax attitude
    towards discipline.
  • From this the notion of the larrikin Digger
    emerged, an important part of contemporary
    Australian identity.

34
Stories and legends
  • Australian language is contradictory too it
    combines a mocking disrespect for established
    authority, particularly if it is pompous or out
    of touch with reality, with a distinctive
    upside-down sense of humour.
  • For instance, Australians take delight in dubbing
    a tall man "Shorty", a silent one "Rowdy" a bald
    man "Curly" and a redhead is "Bluey".

35
Stories and legends
  • Politicians, or "pollies", be they at state or
    federal level, are generally disliked and
    distrusted.
  • Paradoxically, Australia is one of the few
    democracies that has compulsory voting at
    elections (federal, state and local).

36
Stories and legends
  • Many of Australia's stories and legends originate
    in the Outback, in the drovers and squatters and
    people of the barren, dusty plains, yet only a
    small proportion of Australians live in the
    Outback, or even in the milder countryside up to
    an hour or two's drive from the cities.

37
Stories and legends
  • This was true even of the Australia of a century
    ago - since the gold rush of the 1850s, most
    Australians have been city-bound, Australia today
    being one of the most urbanised countries in the
    world.
  • Nevertheless, after a century or more spent
    absorbing the bush yarns of Henry Lawson and the
    poetry of Banjo Paterson from the comfort of
    armchairs in the suburbs, the legends are real
    and fairly odd.

38
Ned Kelly
  • Edward "Ned" Kelly (3 June 1855 11 November
    1880) was an Australian bushranger and a folk
    hero for his defiance of the colonial
    authorities.
  • Kelly was born in Victoria to an Irish convict
    father, and as a young man he clashed with the
    police.
  • Following an incident at his home in 1878, police
    parties searched for him in the bush where he
    murdered three policemen resulting in the colony
    proclaiming Kelly and his gang wanted outlaws.

39
Ned Kelly
  • A final violent confrontation with police took
    place at Glenrowan.
  • Kelly, dressed in home-made plate metal armour
    and helmet, was captured and sent to jail.
  • He was hanged for murder at Old Melbourne Gaol in
    1880.
  • His daring and notoriety made him an iconic
    figure in Australian history, folk lore,
    literature, art and film.
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