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Typical Australian

Decent Essays

The Australian Identity I am here today to discuss our Australian Identity. How do you imagine a typical Australian? Maybe you see a blonde haired, blue eyed surfing babe? Or a bushman who drinks Bushels tea and four X beers while munching on some snags cooked on the BBQ? Or perhaps you see someone like Steve Irwin, our iconic crocodile hunter. Or do you picture the movie “Crocodile Dundee?” Australians are stereotyped and our typical Australian is usually imagined to be male. (Click) Russell Ward, well known author, portrays his view of the traditional Aussie as a practical man who is rough, tough bushman that holds true friendship and loyal spirits. Today I will be analysing two poems and one play and determining whether they are …show more content…

The reader is able to imagine the horses running wild and the Australian bushman chasing after them. (Click) Typical Australian language and slang is used. Words and phrases such as “bushmen love hard riding where the wild bush horses are” and “And he swung his stockwhip round” help communicate to the reader attitudes, values and beliefs of the true Australian spirit and mateship. Throughout the story, the mood is exciting and fast-paced with tense anticipation, leading up to the exciting climatic victory. In this poem, women and children are marginalised. The bushman riders are men and during those times the women and children stayed at home while the men worked during the day. “The Man from Snowy River” is a ballad which reinforces the typical Australian Identity, as the rough and tough man who is willing to take risks and challenges. The hero in this poem is brave, resourceful and thrill-seeking, displaying the qualities that Russell Ward describes as being part of the mythical Australian Identity. (Click) The One Day of the Year is a celebrated Australian play written by Alan Seymour in 1960. The play recounts the story of the Cook family around Anzac day. Alf, an aging digger, who served in WW1, celebrates Anzac Day with a few beers his and mate Wacka Dawson Hughie (Alf’s son) is attending university where he meets his girlfriend Jan. Hughie feels embarrassed and ashamed

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