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Australian Identity

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Australian Identity
Do Australian people have a distinctive culture or are stereotypes of in texts true?

Australians are perceived in text as, beer-drinking larrikins, people who use kangaroos as a transportation, crocodile wrestlers, lack in fashion, foster beers, desert, sparsely populated and bushmans and mateship. However these representations are not true. Stereotype is a widely held but fixed and oversimplified image or idea of a particular type of person or thing. National identity is a person's identity and sense of belonging to one state or to one nation, a feeling one shares with a group of people, regardless of one's citizenship status. Some examples of national identity in Australia are beer-drinking larrikins, country Folk, convicts, racists, bogen/ocker Australian slang for example g’day. I strongly believe that Australia does have a distinctive stereotype, however they are not perceived in text accurately in modern days in Australia. The three arguments will include movies such as: Crocodile Dundee, Muriels Wedding and Australia. These specific movies starr’s Australian actors of how they have a portrayal of Australian stereotypes.

To begin with the representations of Australian people in the film Crocodile Dundee are not entirely fair or relevant to contemporary Australians.The film producers portray Australians as beer-drinking larrikins and people with a sense of humor, This is exemplified at the beginning of the movie when Crocodile Dundee enters the pub full of loud beer-drinking larrikins, It is apparent that stereotypical representations trivialise most typical Australians who may not relate to maintain working in the outback. Consequently, the representations in the film are not particularly relevant for most modern Australian people. Crocodile Dundee shows a portrayal of how Australians are bushmans, and how they have to be tough enough to handle the harsh, barren outback. However modern days in Australians, there is a small quantity of bushmans. One

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