Images of Australia: An Introductory Reader in Australian StudiesGillian Whitlock, David Carter This introductory text for students and general readers is designed for use with the new ABC TV Open Learning program. Through a collection of 14 readings by writers and academics such as Graeme Davison and Gail Reekie it explores questions of Australian culture and identity. |
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Page 30
... bohemianism , they distin- guished themselves from those educated middle - class laymen who were committed to cultural improvement and had dominated the cultural establishment since the gold rushes . Accompanying the developing sense of ...
... bohemianism , they distin- guished themselves from those educated middle - class laymen who were committed to cultural improvement and had dominated the cultural establishment since the gold rushes . Accompanying the developing sense of ...
Page 31
... bohemianism centred on the Bulletin office , bohemian clubs such as the Dawn and Dusk Club in Sydney and the Canni- bal Club in Melbourne , and the various artists ' camps where the new generation of painters discussed their work ...
... bohemianism centred on the Bulletin office , bohemian clubs such as the Dawn and Dusk Club in Sydney and the Canni- bal Club in Melbourne , and the various artists ' camps where the new generation of painters discussed their work ...
Page 35
... bohemianism of the 1890s . Women were as out of place in the Dawn and Dusk Club as they were in the shearing shed . George Taylor's emphasis on being " Bohemian boys " together , for ex- ample , excluded all women except an artist's ...
... bohemianism of the 1890s . Women were as out of place in the Dawn and Dusk Club as they were in the shearing shed . George Taylor's emphasis on being " Bohemian boys " together , for ex- ample , excluded all women except an artist's ...
Contents
Introduction | 1 |
Part Two White Australia Has a Black History | 59 |
Part Three A Multicultural Nation? | 101 |
Copyright | |
8 other sections not shown
Common terms and phrases
Aboriginal acceptance Affairs areas argued artists Association attempt attitudes Australian became become Black British Bulletin bush called celebration century character civilisation claims Collected colonial continued created critics cultural define described distinctive early economic equality established ethnic example experience fact feminist give groups historians ideas identity ideology immigration important influence interests labour land late later Lawson legend living London look major means Melbourne ment migrants multiculturalism myth nation nationalist nature never origins particular past pioneer political population Press problems production programs radical Reading relations Report response seen sense settlement social society South Studies suburban suggests Sydney things tion tradition tralian University urban values verse Ward Western women writers
References to this book
Alter/Asians: Asian-Australian Identities in Art, Media, and Popular Culture Ien Ang No preview available - 2000 |