Digital resources tagged with ‘culture’
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Every digital resource on Film Australia’s Digital Learning site is tagged with descriptive terms. This list shows the resources which are tagged with ‘culture’.
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A Lifetime in Limbo The people of Bikini Atoll are still waiting to return home more than 50 years after the United States Navy removed them. |
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ABC Online & Broadband Production What does the end of the 'golden age of Australian broadcast media' mean? Stuart Cunningham discusses the idea. |
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Aboriginal People in the Gibson Desert In 1966 a few Aboriginal families were living nomadic lives in the heart of Australia's Gibson Desert. Women would collect seeds from Woolybuck grass to make bread whilst their husbands searched for old spearheads and tools for hunting. |
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Aboriginal People Make a Canoe and Hunt a Turtle Arnhem Land in Australia's Northern Territory is the home of coastal Aboriginal People. On the beach it's time to play out one of the dramas of daily life - the return of the hunters. |
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An Alternative Actor's Collective Actors talk about the Pram Factory collective and its processes. At communal meetings it helped to be tall, articulate and male. |
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An Australian Greek Wife Toula, an Australian-born Greek wife, is a Workers' Compensation officer. Breaking free from traditional Greek women's roles, she desires a career and creative freedom. |
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An Australian Wedding, 1968 Powerhouse Museum Curator Dr Kimberley Webber looks at how collections bring to life Australian stories in museums. |
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Anna Naupa on Vanuatan heritage Ni-Vanuatu writer and historian Anna Naupa discusses different views of South Sea Islander labour trade history. |
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Aussie-made content Australian film and television production is competing in a globalised world with big international production companies who market their product effectively to the world market. |
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Australian South Sea Islanders Discover the Past Joe and Monica Leo are the descendents of ni-Vanuatu who helped build Queensland's sugar industry. |
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Australian television drama Australian content on television reflects our culture and our society. Mac Gudgeon celebrates the importance of Homicide in the history of Australian television production. Stuart Cunningham and Scott Goodings remember some of the popular dramas which showed Australians that they could love Australian programming. |
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Broadcasts in cyberspace Trevor Barr contrasts the privileged access to public television broadcasts with the free information exchange on the Internet. Stephen Mayne celebrates the value of ABC Online as a national resource and describes how activists have used the Internet to successfully broadcast their alternative views. |
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CAAMA & Indigenous Broadcasting A broadcast studio at Radio Redfern in the late 80s. Christina Spurgeon talks about the importance of providing media services to remote Indigenous communities to the culture, identity and language of Aboriginal Australians. |
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Captain Cook - The Polynesian Tupaia Joins the Endeavour Voyage Cook takes on board an additional passenger, Polynesian priest and fellow navigator Tupaia. Tupaia shares his remarkable navigational skills, convinced that the notion of a great land mass is a European fantasy. |
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Cash for comment The 'Cash for Comment' affair in 1999 showed Australian audiences how corrupt and corruptible commercial broadcasting can be. |
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Challenging Colonialism -- Oliver Howes interview Producer and director Oliver Howes reflects on French Polynesia's colonial history. |
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Community radio Gary Adams describes the experience in the 1970s of listening to pirate radio stations and how this led to the demand for public radio. |
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Community TV The role of community television in general and its role in training TV personalities. |
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Content Quotas The importance of content quotas in preserving and encouraging programs that represent Australian culture. |
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Creating an Australian Image Stuart Cunningham explains how innovations in technology have transformed television content. |
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Cuc Lam's Suitcase It may be just a small red vinyl suitcase but for Vietnamese refugee Cuc Lam it’s a symbol of a new beginning in a new country. |
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Culture Reborn Traditional Polynesian dancing was suppressed by missionaries. It is now an important part of tourism and a means of cultural power. |
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Dreamings, Through Indigenous Art Indigenous art is like topographic mapping of land and culture. Michael Nelson Tjakamarra works at painting concentric circles which represent sacred sites. |
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Early radio broadcasting An excerpt from The Royal Empire Society Banquet. Liz Jacka describes the impact which radio broadcasts had on Australian life. |
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End of Cinema Newsreel The ultimate decline of cinema newsreels occurred with the coming of colour television. |
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Experiencing Tonga -- Nick Adler interview Producer and director Nick Adler talks about living in Tonga during the making of Fit for a King. |
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Family Life in Geelong In a typical 60s family a mother works to get dinner ready as the children come home after school. After Dad arrives home from work in the Holden, Mum serves traditional roast lamb and three vegetables. |
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Family radio A young boy plays along with a musical game during one of the many ABC broadcasts for children. Children from around Australia tune into a kindergarten broadcast over the ABC. Tim Bowden remembers the ABC children's program The Argonauts. |
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Fox Movietone News The importance in Australian news broadcasting history of Movietone and other newsreels. |
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Imparja: Indigenous Broadcasting Imparja Television allows Indigenous communities to tell their stories and to communicate both with each other as well as the wider Australian community. |
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Indigenous Health Workers Indigenous people, particularly those from remote communities, fear seeking medical attention. Joan Winch, an Indigenous health professional, set up a health worker training college for Indigenous health workers. |
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Indymedia Stuart Cunningham talks about how and why Australian content has changed over the last 40 years. |
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Launch of TV Liz Jacka provides a brief history of the debate on how to establish television broadcasting in Australia. Tim Bowden recalls the enthusiasm with which Australians embraced television. |
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New technologies create new TV formats John Safran talks about the unique techniques, structure and ideas of reality TV. |
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News as Entertainment John Safran talks about the use of 'doorstopping' in current affairs programs. Scott Goodings traces the celebrity and entertainment value of today's news broadcasts to the 'news wars' of the late 1980s. |
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Newsreels before sound Newsreels included events of both political and social importance and were screened all day long in specially designed cinemas. |
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Noel Tovey Noel Tovey survived a childhood of poverty, neglect, sexual abuse and racial prejudice to become a leading light in the arts as an actor, choreographer, writer and theatre director. |
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Online Communities ALTOS - an online chat community based in Germany - provided a 'world without borders' for its members. |
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Reality TV An excerpt from a live 'eviction' episode of the popular reality TV series Big Brother. Scott Goodings describes his experience of watching reality TV. |
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Rescuing the Past The French colonists discouraged and suppressed Tahiti's traditional culture but it is now re-emerging. |
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Road to Progress -- Peter Butt interview For producer and director Peter Butt, making My Father, My Country was both an adventure and a chance to discover Papua New Guinea's past. |
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SBS Charter John Safran, Megan Spencer and Scott Goodings discuss the nature of programming at SBS. |
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Sense of Belonging Joe and Monica Leo embark on a journey to Vanuatu to recover a small part of their past. |
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Song for the King -- Vika and Linda Bull interview Vika and Linda Bull talk about the importance of their heritage and connection to Tonga. |
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Technology Timeline 1960s: film vs video image quality Ray Edmondson compares the image quality of 35mm and 16mm film when it is transmitted in cinemas, on television and over the Internet. |
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The Aussie Drawl An announcer reads the news headlines for ABC radio. |
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The Digital Divide Trevor Barr reminds us that more than half of the world's population does not have access to the Internet. Stephen Mayne shares his belief that the digital divide will prevent Internet broadcasts from reaching entire populations in the way that television or radio broadcasts can. |
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The Global Machine Humans have always argued over territory; it’s just that the weapons get deadlier and the rules keep changing. |
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The Godfrey Shawl Among the Natioinal Gallery of Australia's rarely seen treasures is an astonishing embroidered shawl from Kashmir in India--one off the finest and rarest of its kind. |
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The Ratings War The ruthless world of commercial television and its chase for ratings is compared to the programming motivations of the public broadcaster. |
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The Rise and Future of Australian Content Megan Spencer believes that taking more risks with writing is the way ahead for televsion drama. |
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The Sugar Labour Trade Phyllis Corowa's father and grandmother were taken from Vanuatu to work on a Queensland sugar plantation. |
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Tommy McRae & Mickey of Ulladulla Working at the end of the 19th century, Aboriginal artists Tommy McRae and Mickey of Ulladulla drew the world around them with an extraordinary vitality and sensitivity to detail. |
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TV and family life The Doonan family relax together at home in front of the television - their 'permanent visitor'. Liz Jacka describes the role of the the Vincent Committee in establishing local drama production for Austalian television. Megan Spencer remembers some of the shows she and her family watched together. |
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TV chases youth market Youth has become a new target audience for television programmers. |
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TV Pop & Rock The opening sequence from Six O'Clock Rock - Australia's first national teenage programme on the ABC. Scott Goodings gives a history of music shows on Australian television. |


























































