Geometry.Net - the online learning center
Home  - Basic_A - Australian Culture Specific
e99.com Bookstore
  
Images 
Newsgroups
Page 4     61-80 of 89    Back | 1  | 2  | 3  | 4  | 5  | Next 20
A  B  C  D  E  F  G  H  I  J  K  L  M  N  O  P  Q  R  S  T  U  V  W  X  Y  Z  

         Australian Culture Specific:     more detail
  1. The Antipodeans: Challenge and Response in Australian 1955-1965
  2. Art from the Land: Dialogues With the Kluge-Ruhe Collection of Australian Aboriginal Art
  3. Queer-Ing the Screen: Sexuality and Australian Film and Television (The Moving Images) by Samantha Searle, 1998-02
  4. The Littoral Zone: Australian Contexts and their Writers (Nature, Culture and Literature)
  5. Framing Culture: Criticism and Policy in Australia (Australian Cultural Studies) by Stuart Cunningham, 1992-01-01
  6. Sport in Australian History (Australian Retrospectives) by Daryl Adair, Wray Vamplew, 1997-12-15
  7. Communication and Cultural Literacy: An Introduction (Australian Cultural Studies) by Tony Schirato, Susan Yell, 1996-08
  8. Intermediate Ilokano: A Integrated Language and Culture Reading Text by Precy Espiritu, 2004-07
  9. Picking Up the Traces: The Making of a New Zealand Literary Culture 1932-1945 by Lawrence Jones, 2004-04-01
  10. Voices in the Wilderness: Images of Aboriginal People in the Australian Media (Contributions to the Study of Mass Media and Communications) by Michael Meadows, 2000-12-30
  11. New Australian Cinema: Sources and Parallels in British and American Film by Brian McFarlane, Geoff Mayer, 1992-06-26
  12. Dreamings = Tjukurrpa: Aboriginal Art of the Western Desert (Art & Design) by Jo-Anne Birnie Danzker, 1994-08
  13. Cosi the Screenplay (Screenplays) by Louis Nowra, 1996-08
  14. Marking Our Times: Selected Works of Art from the Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Collection at the National Gallery of Australia by Avril Quaill, 1996-05

61. Australian Cultural Tourism Conference - CONFERENCE PROGRAMME
in Wellington where she has specific responsibility for to enhance the quality ofcultural tourism activities commenced work with the australian Rugby Union in
http://www.actcwa.com/conference-programme.html
CONFERENCE PROGRAMME
KEY NOTE ADDRESS-
"Cultural Tourism -Journey Further"
    Michael Lynch AM - Chief Executive, South bank Centre London
    In 2001 Michael was awarded the Order of Australia (AM) in the Queen's Birthday Honours for services to arts administration. He has had an extensive career in arts administration, film and television.
    Previous positions have included Chief Executive of the Sydney Opera House, General Manager of the Australia Council, the Federal Government's, arts funding and advisory body, General Manager of the Sydney Theatre Company, Manager of the Nimrod Theatre and Administrator of the Australian National Playwrights Conference. Michael also produced the feature film "Raw Nerve" in 1988 with his own agency Forcast.
    View Speech

    Kathy Lette - Author
    Kathy Lette achieved 'succes de scandale' as a teenager, for her gritty first novel Puberty Blues. She has worked as a newspaper columnist in Sydney and Los Angeles and as a television sitcom writer for Columbia Pictures In Los Angeles.
    Her other novels include Girls Night Out, The Llama Parlour, Foetal Attraction, Mad Cows, Altar Ego and Nip 'n Tuck. Mad Cows has been made into a motion picture starring Joanna Lumley and Anna Friel.

62. AIMIA - Australian Interactive Media Industry Association
s ability to provide support for specific cultural projects—such as the fundingmade available for the new media funds at the australian Film Commission and
http://www.aimia.com.au/i-cms?page=535

63. Horwood Language Centre Courses Australian Cultural Programmes
Language Centre, in association with the australian Centre, hosts a number of specialcultural programs each is designed to meet the specific needs of
http://www.hlc.unimelb.edu.au/courses/aust_cult_progs.html

64. Online Handbook 2004 - Bachelor Of Arts (Indigenous Australian Cultural Studies)
It examines cultural, social, economic, political contexts and issues within is consideredthrough Indigenous australian perspectives. specific Requirements
http://www.handbook.curtin.edu.au/courses/30/305634.html
CurtinSearch Curtin Site Index
About Curtin University
Academic calendar ... Student policy and procedures
305634 v.1 Bachelor of Arts (Indigenous Australian Cultural Studies)
BA(Curtin)
Introduction
This course offers students - both Indigenous and non-Indigenous - an exciting opportunity to develop knowledge and skills required to work in a range of professional roles which require an understanding of the diversity and cultural ways of Indigenous Australians. It examines cultural, social, economic, political contexts and issues confronting Indigenous Australian people. The dynamic and complex environment that Indigenous Australian people are positioned within is considered through Indigenous Australian perspectives.
Specific Requirements
STAT elements considered are E and either V or Q.
Recognition of Prior Learning
Applications for recognition of prior learning are assessed on an individual basis.
Duration and Availability
The course is three years full-time or equivalent part-time study.
Course Organisation
Units adopt an approach that embodies principles of social justice, informed by emergent Indigenous Australian critical theory.

65. Crofts
acceptable genre the period film - is less culturally specific than the In thiscontext, australian cultural specificity of necessity loses out; aesthetic
http://wwwmcc.murdoch.edu.au/ReadingRoom/2.2/Crofts.html
Contents of this Issue Continuum Contents Reading Room CRCC ... MU Continuum:
vol. 2 no 2 (1989)
Performance Theory Australia
Stephen Crofts 'Re-imaging Australia: Crocodile Dundee overseas'
1: Hollywood's controlling interest in Australian film distribution and exhibition 2: US cultural uninterest in Australia and its limited distribution of Australian film 3: Exporting Australian film to the US 4: The precedence of aesthetic criteria over those of cultural specificity in the re-editing of the film
1: Hollywood's controlling interest in Australian film distribution and exhibition
2: US cultural disinterest In Australia
The US may have military-strategic and economic interests in Australia, but these are certainly no guarantee of concern for Australian culture. The US, after all, is not renowned for its sensitivity to other cultures, as witness Vietnam and Nicaragua, and white America's treatment of the original Indian population bears comparison with white Australia's treatment of Aborigines. US indifference to the specificity of Australian culture can be seen in the assumptions and ignorances of its custodians of film scholarship and film distribution. On the scholarship front, first: my favourite item in the prestigious Museum of Modern Art's Film Study Centre is a slip of paper inserted into a file of cuttings on Australian cinema. It reads: "AUSTRALIA. Miscellaneous film periodicals related to this subject can be viewed on request. They may be in the original language."

66. Australian National University (ANU) Library - Australian Visual Arts
The online gateway to australian cultural organisations, websites Pacific, from theNational Gallery of Australia. if you cannot find specific information using
http://anulib.anu.edu.au/clusters/ita/subjects/austvisres.html
Skip Navigation Search the ANU ANU Web Staff Directory Handbook Mail Archives CABS Minutes for ANU Home About the Library Help Site Map ... Division of Information Library Scholarly Information Services Library Catalogue
Search all collections, incl. online material
Online Resources
Find databases, exam papers and more
... Internet links Search Library web site Catalogue (title) Catalogue (author) Catalogue (words) Reserve (course) World Wide Web for School of Art School of Music Centre for New Media Arts
Australian Visual Arts Websites
Jump to:
Australian Art Directories
Art Databases at ANU
International Visual Art Links

Art Galleries and Museums in Australia
... Art Libraries
Aboriginal Art
Art and Design Schools
  • Art Galleries and Museums in Australia
    Artists and Artists' Associations
    • ADElaide is a web-site growing from the foundations of on-line exhibitions of student and graduate art-work from Adelaide, South Australia.
  • 67. Australian Businesswomen's Network
    language is universal, much of it is also culturally specific. For example, peoplefrom some countries don t touch or point in the same way Australians do, and
    http://www.abn.org.au/newsletters/communicatewithcust.html
    Communicating with customers and clients from other cultures By Sue Patterson With the Olympics bringing vast numbers of overseas visitors to Australia this year, you may have the opportunity to sell your products or services to a wider range of people from different cultures than ever before. What an opportunity! But what can you do to communicate most successfully? This month's expert Sue Patterson explains. Communication with people from other cultures covers three main areas: 1. Understanding/ non-understanding
    This happens when one person uses language which is not known or fully understood by the other. 2. Understanding/ misunderstanding
    This happens when there's a mismatch between what the speaker intends and what the listener understands. They understand each other's words but misread each other's intentions. 3. Alignment/clashes in outlook and values
    This occurs when the listener's cultural attitudes and values clash with the attitudes and values expressed by the speaker's words and behaviour. So what can you do to avoid miscommunication?

    68. Packaging Australia: Working Dog's 'The Dish'
    to suggest and encourage a quite specific, codified image of Australia and Australianness.Ironically, it honed in on our country and our culture in order to
    http://home.vicnet.net.au/~freeman/articles/packagingoz.htm
    Packaging Australia: Working Dog's The Dish The success of Rob Sitch’s The Dish (2000) capped off a year in Australian film during which the strongest performers were films that in many ways conformed to Hollywood conventions and genres. The Dish aside, the three most successful Australian films in 2000 were certainly Kate Woods’ Looking For Alibrandi , Andrew Dominik’s Chopper and Aleksi Vellis’ The Wog Boy . All did very respectable business, and appear to be in the process of replicating that box-office success in the video market. It’s interesting, then, that these films do in many ways adhere to a ‘Hollywood’ approach to cinema. Both Alibrandi and Chopper are essentially pre-sold properties stemming from already successful books, a dominant focus for production in the US system. The Wog Boy similarly rides on the success of the Wogs Out of Work stage shows, driven by Nick Giannopoulos and his product recognition juggernaut. These films – particularly The Wog Boy – aspire to a model of popular cinema and a conventional American-styled cinema but do not consciously appear to be designed for anyone else’s gaze but our own. They stem from Australian products, which have already been road-tested on Australian audiences, and their success is predicated on their recognisable ‘Australianness’. The other major success of 2000 was The Dish , a film which has also enjoyed admirable box-office success and appeared to connect with Australian audiences. It too conforms to Hollywood structure and genre, but what distinguishes

    69. Transformations In Politics, Culture & Society - Session 8
    common though rarely recognised effects of cultural encounters occurring in onespecific type of institution in one country australian universities with
    http://www.inter-disciplinary.net/tpcs1s9.htm
    Download Style
    Sheet 1
    Download Style
    Sheet 2
    Session 9: Transformation, Migration and Asylum
    Chair: Sofie van Bauwel Isabel Sendlak Adaptation of Migrants to a New University Culture: Perceptions, Expectations, and Reality
    University of Newcastle, Australia In recent years, many countries around the globe have experienced increasing participation of migrants and temporary residents. The meaning of cultural difference and "otherness" varies depending on specific characteristics of the original and the host culture. This paper presents an attempt to analyse some of the most common though rarely recognised effects of "cultural encounters" occurring in one specific type of institution in one country: Australian universities with their relatively high ethnic and cultural diversity of students and academic staff. These effects are observed in several dimensions: educational and intellectual values, concepts of knowledge and the social role of intellectuals.
    Observations presented here were made during a longitudinal study involving local and migrant academics and students in several universities. Views of the Australian academic culture and of academic cultures of their mother countries, held by migrant students and staff, are analysed and compared. This will reveal not only some significant inconsistencies in the current, real university system, but also their much more active and critical approach their new environment than usually recognised. It is suggested that this specific group is motivated to and can play a more creative, active role in the system.

    70. Australian Folktales
    Using all the information gathered, in order to create a culturally appropriatemultimedia presentation Reflection Paper – australian Folktales. Be specific!
    http://antilles.odedodea.edu/ams/On-line Projects/Australian Folktales/Australia
    A ustralian F olktales ILA – 7 th grade Purpose -Students will read an assigned Australian Folktale. Students will create a multimedia presentation (Power Point) based on their folktale. Standards Reading – Reading Word Analysis Vocabulary and Concept Development Reading Comprehension Literary response and analysis Written and oral English language Writing Process Writing applications in compositions Listening and speaking Use technological aids throughout the process as appropriate Use literature as a springboard to writing Enhance writing through descriptive words Use telecommunication to increase audience and collaborative possibilities Interpret folktales through discussion or some form of art Make connections to personal experiences Explain cultural differences in different types of literature Explain and use simple figurative language English Language – Appropriate language use
    • spelling, mechanics and other conversion of English in speaking and writing
    Accessing and Processing Information – Develop and use word processing skills
    • Compose stories on computers using graphics to illustrate Access information from multimedia reference materials Use language and technology to apply higher order thinking skills Practice thinking and problem solving strategies Use multiple intelligence to produce multimedia presentation Use multimedia technology as a tool for self-assessments, and use electronic research.

    71. Helping Arts And Cultural Organisations Go International - Australian Trade Comm
    The events program includes showcasing of specific industry sectors, includingthe arts and culture. Details on Business Club Australia are also in your
    http://www.austrade.gov.au/corporate/layout/0,,0_S1-1_CORPXID0015-2_-3_PWB114722
    Text Only About Austrade Media Centre Publications ... Contact us Our Websites Australia Corporate Export Awards ICT-Biotech India IT Italy Overseas USA
    Australian Trade Commission Search index Home For Australian exporters For overseas buyers ... Trade events Media Centre Media releases Media contacts Speeches Success stories ... Print friendly
    Speeches
    Helping arts and cultural organisations go international
    You have heard how the Australia Council is assisting Arts and Cultural organisations export. Now I would like to explain something about another organisation, Austrade. Austrade is the arm of the Government which helps Australians do business overseas, including focussing on the commercial possibilities of arts and cultural exports. There is always a question mark over where you draw the line when you are talking about statistics but for the sector represented here this evening, exports were valued at $659 million in 1998/99. So you are part of an important and growing export sector. Austrade attends board meetings of AusFilm and we have worked closely with them to develop and implement a marketing program in co-operation with state government agencies and film companies who provide facilities and production services. In particular, Austrade Los Angeles has worked successfully with AusFilm, state film commissions and a number of pre-production and post-production companies to attract US film producers to Australia. We do this through the ongoing promotion of the benefits Australia has to offer, such as the skills of our production crews, our varied location sites and the post production facilities.

    72. AusStats : 4172.0 Nineteen Billion Dollars From Culture
    specific sectors which make up the cultural industry are also examined in detail.Cultural Trends A Statistical Overview, Australia, 1997 (Cat. no.
    http://www.abs.gov.au/Ausstats/abs@.nsf/0/dc6c67b15e4c6689ca2568a900136268?OpenD

    73. SWaP Webzine Muslim
    environment which is sensitive to both specific learning and cultural needs. ProfessorDeane Terrell, Former ViceChancellor, australian National University
    http://swap.idp.com/gulf_muslim/supportforyourreligionandculture/default.asp
    June 7, 2004
    Support for your religion and culture
    Are there Muslim organisations or communities in Australia?
    Yes - lots! The Australian Federation of Islamic Councils ( www.afic.com.au ) has been Australia's peak Islamic organisation for almost 40 years, and has councils in each State and Territory. It is responsible for halal food products certification, schools and mosque building projects, media monitoring and community activities. For students in particular, there is the Muslim Students' League of Australia, which represents the interests of Muslim students; the Federation of Australian Muslim Students and Youth ( www.famsy.com ); and Young Muslims of Australia ( www.yma.org.au ). There are also lots of community organisations that are funded by government programs, donations and grants from overseas. Many universities, vocational institutes and schools also have their own Muslim student associations which arrange activities, bring students together to celebrate religious festivals, and provide information on local Islamic resources. See the Muslim student associations and University mosques and prayer rooms , or ask your institution.

    74. APRCCN - Cultural Policy & Law
    activities of cultural agencies is also well developed. These activities arisefrom the specific interest of particular agency. The australian Broadcasting
    http://www.culturelink.or.kr/policy_aus.html
    Cultural Policy Australia Bangladesh China Fiji India Indonesia Japan Korea Laos Malaysia Myanmar Nepal New Zealand Pakistan PapuaNewguinea Philippines Singapore SriLanka Thailand Vietnam Laws on Culture Australia Bangladesh China Fiji India Indonesia Japan Korea Laos Malaysia Myanmar Nepal New Zealand Pakistan PapuaNewguinea Philippines Singapore SriLanka Thailand Vietnam
    Australia INTRODUCTION l GENERAL DIRECTIONS OF CULTURAL POLICY l ADMINISTRATIVE AND INSTITUTIONAL STRUCTURES l INSTRUMENTS OF CULTURAL POLICY l SECTORAL POLICIES l CULTURAL INDUSTRIES l CULTURAL DEVELOPMENT l INTERNATIONAL CULTURAL COOPERATION l ADDRESS l SOURCE 0. Introduction The Commonwealth of Australia occupy the whole of the island continent of Australia, lying between the Indian and Pacific Oceans. At the total land area of 7,682,300 km2 the continent-state is composed of six States and two Territories. The States are: New South Wales, Victoria, Queensland, South Australia, Western Australia and Tasmania. There are also Northern and Australian Capital Territory.

    75. Media Release - Australian Institute Of Family Studies (AIFS) - Research Report
    responsive and sensitive to the specific needs of or undermine parenting in differentcultural contexts Parenting in australian families a comparative study of
    http://www.aifs.org.au/institute/media/media010315.html

    What's New
    About AIFS Search Media ... Links
    15 March 2001
    Australian parents: different cultures: same hopes and dreams
    New research from the Australian Institute of Family Studies shows that Australian parents from Anglo-Australian, Vietnamese and Torres Strait Islander backgrounds share the same aspirations for their children. The ultimate goal for all of the parents in the study was to raise happy, well-adjusted children. For the Vietnamese and Torres Strait Islander parents, that also meant having children who were comfortably adapted to the mainstream of Australian culture, while retaining their culture and language. Parenting in Australian Families: a comparative study of Anglo-Australian, Torres Strait Islander and Vietnamese communities Who looks after children? Despite growing public expectation that fathers should generally be more involved in parenting, the data confirmed that the reality for parents, be they from Anglo-Australian, Vietnamese, or Torres Strait Islander background, was that mothers were primarily responsible for looking after children. Parental support networks The findings clearly illustrated the importance of broader issues such as employment flexibility, unemployment, lack of support and the absence of basic amenities.

    76. Ethnomathematics-Key Text
    of counting words may not be linked to specific cultural activities. australian Aborigines.Mathematics is used by different cultures for activities in addition
    http://www.science.org.au/nova/073/073key.htm
    Key text
    Published by
    Australian Academy
    of Science Sponsored by Advocates of ethnomathematics say it is helping different cultures to understand each other. Printer-friendly version of complete topic The term ‘ethnomathematics’ was first used in the late 1960s by a Brazilian mathematician, Ubiratan D’Ambrosio, to describe the mathematical practices of identifiable cultural groups. Some see it as the study of mathematics in different cultures, others as a way of making mathematics more relevant to different cultural or ethnic groups, yet others as a way of understanding the differences between cultures. But perhaps the most powerful claim for the new discipline has been made by D’Ambrosio himself (quoted in The Chronicle of Higher Education , 6 October 2000): Mathematics is absolutely integrated with Western civilization, which conquered and dominated the entire world. The only possibility of building up a planetary civilization depends on restoring the dignity of the losers and, together, winners and losers, moving into the new. [Ethnomathematics, then, is] a step towards peace. This makes ethnomathematics a rather unusual discipline, because it attempts to meld science and social justice. This isn't something that sits comfortably with many scientists: science, they argue, is science, and trying to make it politically correct will only impede its progress. Some educators fret that teaching mathematics using an ethnomathematical approach reduces it to a social-studies subject that teaches students little about ‘real’ mathematics. Others simply ridicule the whole notion: according to one disparaging journalist, 'Unless you wish to balance your checkbook the ancient Navajo way, it’s probably safe to ignore the whole thing'.

    77. Melissa Chiu
    today will address the theme of this conference Inside Out Reassessing InternationalCultural Influence by looking at specific developments in australian art
    http://www.apexart.org/conference/Chiu.htm
    Conference in Rio de Janiero, Brazil - July 2001
    Asian-Australian artists: Recent Cultural Shifts in Australia
    by Melissa Chiu Ah Xian China China Bust 7 , 1998 Porcelain
    Kate Beynon Li Ji: Warrior Girl , 2000 Digital photographic print
    Felicia Kan Different Skies (Ocean 1,2,3), 2000 Photographs
    David Sequeira 31 Threads , 1996-2000 (detail) Goache on paper chinoiserie and japonisme . These differences further deconstruct the idea that Australia has the same relationship as the West with Asia, recognising the specificity of the Australian situation and, in particular, the aspects that make Australia different from the West, itself an homogenising and largely useless epithet. An interesting aspect of the current situation is the way Australia 'imagines' itself within the region. By this I mean the way that Australia chooses to project and promote representations of itself within Asia. Nowhere can the results of this presentation be seen more clearly than in the visual arts. One of the best examples of this was in the first Asia-Pacific Triennial at the Queensland Art Gallery in 1993. In spite of the fact that this expansive event was an attempt to position Australia as a cultural centre within the region, the

    78. CCS 352 Flashpoints, Contestations In Contemporary Australian
    focuses on a contemporary Flashpoint in australian culture.
    http://www.admin.uow.edu.au/sid/owa/CAL.SUBJECTINFO?p_subcode=CCS 352&p_year=200

    79. University Of New South Wales - Library Home - Australian Art Subject Guide - Jo
    Praxis M australian cultural identity. australian art journals in the COFA and UNSWLibraries Search by title for specific journals the catalogue
    http://info.library.unsw.edu.au/cofa/guides/australian/austjour.html

    Contact Us
    Help Resources Using the Library ... Science Subject Guides
    Australian Art Subject Guide
    Key Resources
    Databases Reference Resources Internet Links This subject guide has been prepared by College of Fine Arts Library staff. Contact Neil Hinsch for further information or assistance in this subject area.
    Journals
    Agenda: Australian contemporary art magazine Indexed in AustArt Index Print:CFA709.9405/14 No.1 (1988) - No.44/45 (1995) Like: art magazine Indexed in Artbibliographies Modern; AustArt Index
    Print:CFA709.9405/14 No.1 (Oct. 1996)- Art almanac Current issue Art and AsiaPacific Indexed in Artbibliographies Modern; AustArt Index
    Print:CFA709.505/6 Vol.1, No.1 (March 1993)- Art and Australia Indexed in Art Abstracts; Art Full Text; APAIS; Artbibliographies Modern; Bibliography of the History of Art; AustArt Index Electronic version via APAIS
    Print:CFAQ709.9405/2 Vol.1, No.1 (1963/64)- Art + (and) law Indexed in AustArt Index
    Print:CFA344.0409705/2 Current 5 years Print:CFA709.9405/5 No.1 (1981)-No.78 (2002) Art Association of Australia and New Zealand newsletter Print:CFA709.9405/20 Current year only

    80. Teaching Innovations Fund - RCRG
    of course delivery and assessment appropriate to specific Asian and African cultures; tofeed our findings back into our australian based recordkeeping
    http://www.sims.monash.edu.au/research/rcrg/research/tif/

    Project Title

    Research Team

    Project Background
    Project Title
    Internationalisation of subject content of the recordkeeping specialisation in the Master of Information Management with reference to the global context of the students' learning environment.
    Research Team
    Assoc Professor Sue McKemmish Frank Upward Barbara Reed Robert Hartland Chief Investigator Chief Investigator Research Consultant Research Assistant
    Project Background
    The recordkeeping program of the School of Information Management and Systems have been developed within the Master of Information Management and Systems (MIMS) program. It is taught within that course in addition to being a professional program available to undergraduates as a specialisation in the third year of the Bachelor of Information Management and Systems. The program has been accredited by the two professional societies involved in recordkeeping: the Records Management Association of Australia and the Australian Society of Archivists. The recordkeeping programs of the School are both nationally and internationally recognised as leading edge education for recordkeeping professionals. The program includes a core of four professional subjects which are available both in distance education mode and on campus. These subjects have been tailored for delivery into workplace-based training and education programs and have been successfully delivered in distance education mode to over one hundred staff of the National Archives of Australia.

    A  B  C  D  E  F  G  H  I  J  K  L  M  N  O  P  Q  R  S  T  U  V  W  X  Y  Z  

    Page 4     61-80 of 89    Back | 1  | 2  | 3  | 4  | 5  | Next 20

    free hit counter