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         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

1. Web Directory
PlanetOut Search Shopping International CultureSpecific Australian
http://tmsyn.wc.ask.com/r?t=an&s=hb&uid=24312681243126812&sid=343126

2. Australian
Web Directory Top / Shopping / International / CultureSpecific / Australian BOOTS Australia
http://tmsyn.wc.ask.com/r?t=an&s=hb&uid=24312681243126812&sid=343126

3. Architecture - Stories From Australia's Culture And Recreation
Australian cricket. Australian culture. Grand Slam tennis. Great Barrier Reef. Australian history for listing is under a specific cultural
http://tmsyn.wc.ask.com/r?t=an&s=hb&uid=24312681243126812&sid=343126

4. Resources On The Culture And Recreation Portal
Australian cricket. Australian culture. Grand Slam tennis. Great Barrier Reef. Australian history opportunities and provides specific
http://tmsyn.wc.ask.com/r?t=an&s=hb&uid=24312681243126812&sid=343126

5. AU$1.5 Billion Of Australian Culture Goes Online ZDNet Australia
AU$1.5 billion of Australian culture goes online users through some of the content, although researchers can also search for specific items.
http://tmsyn.wc.ask.com/r?t=an&s=hb&uid=24312681243126812&sid=343126

6. Medical Anthropology Culture Specific Diseases
Culture Specific Diseases There are some diseases that have very limited distributions around early 1950's, a team of Australian doctors began
http://tmsyn.wc.ask.com/r?t=an&s=hb&uid=24312681243126812&sid=343126

7. BUBL LINK Australian Culture
Words specific to Australian language and culture are defined in a glossary for each story.
http://tmsyn.wc.ask.com/r?t=an&s=hb&uid=24312681243126812&sid=343126

8. Aboriginal Culture
Australian Aboriginal Culture in Depth Australian Aboriginal 'art' is transformed using the for larger bark paintings with specific individual
http://tmsyn.wc.ask.com/r?t=an&s=hb&uid=24312681243126812&sid=343126

9. Australian Culture Quizzes - Club Trivia
More Random Facts Home All Categories General Knowledge Culture Heritage Specific Australian Culture
http://tmsyn.wc.ask.com/r?t=an&s=hb&uid=24312681243126812&sid=343126

10. The Fight For Australian Culture
NATIVEAUSTRALIAN CULTURE. However, to our way of thinking, the most important constituent element of While the Australia-specific part of our
http://tmsyn.wc.ask.com/r?t=an&s=hb&uid=24312681243126812&sid=343126

11. Australian Popular Culture Books And Articles - Research
australian Popular culture Scholarly books and articles on australian Popularculture at Questia, Type your specific word or phrase in the box above
http://www.questia.com/library/history/australian-and-pacific-islands-history/au

12. Talk:Culture-specific Syndrome - Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia
An interesting aspect of culturespecific syndromes is how real they are respects it is nearly unknown outside American-australian-British culture,
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Talk:Culture-specific_syndrome
Talk:Culture-specific syndrome
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.
Contents
edit
Cooling effect of oil on human body
Following is a copy of the discussion that happenned at the Reference Desk , which seeded this article and Suudu I've often felt my internal body temperature go up or at least it appeared so. The symptoms would be: feeling heat in the eyes and experiencing difficulty with urinating. One remedy that my parents (and many others here) suggest is applying a few drops of gingelly oil sesame oil ) or castor oil in the navel . I've always found immediate relief with this. What is the mechanism behind this remedy? Sundar talk contribs 04:24, July 21, 2005 (UTC)
psychosomatic in nature (see also placebo effect ), and possibly the feeling of your internal body temperature rising is psychosomatic, as well. Proto t c 12:03, 21 July 2005 (UTC)
My unsure wording (like at least it appeared so ) probably led you to think as above. I wish to clarify that the uncertainty was only with respect to my assessment of the cause, but the symptoms are real and the inconvenience during urination is a very objective symptom in that you can practically feel a pain as if your own urine is piercing the inner wall of the urethra (at least, for a male). Also, it is not peculiar to me. I've heard the same complaint from a number of males and some females in this part of the world (

13. 90505 ENGLISH LANGUAGE AUSTRALIAN CULTURE AND IDIOM
australian culture as represented in graphic forms. 10.00 Human Concepts inculturespecific Configurations, OUP, Oxford.
http://www.usq.edu.au/unit-1998/fullspec/90505s2d.htm
90505 ENGLISH LANGUAGE: AUSTRALIAN CULTURE AND IDIOM
Year No. Offer Mode Description Cred. Pts 98 90505 S2 D ENG LANG AUST CULTURE IDIO 1.00
Contents
STAFFING:
Examiner: C. KOSSEN
Moderator: S. TYLER
RATIONALE:
Culture and language are integrally related and interdependent. Within the Australian cultural context language is involved in a mutually interactive and affective relationship with socio-cultural norms, values and practices. In order to function effectively within the parameters of the English language environment it is essential that individuals develop an awareness of both the formal requirements of language and the underlying socio cultural forces which determine its use and interpretation.
SYNOPSIS:
This unit increases knowledge of the English language in both spoken and written forms through an in-depth examination of the interactive relationship between language and the Australian socio-cultural environment.
OBJECTIVES:
On successful completion of the unit students will have:
  • increased knowledge and understanding of the English language
  • developed an awareness of the cultural and social dimensions
    of language
  • developed the capacity to analyse the impact of context on
    language usage.
  • 14. Course Specification For CMS 1003
    This course will investigate different aspects of australian culture, such as family culture and cognition Universal human concepts in culturespecific
    http://www.usq.edu.au/course/specification/2005/CMS1003-S2-2005-44731.html
    CMS 1003 English Language: Australian Culture
    Subject Cat-nbr Class Term Mode Description Units Campus CMS ONC English Language: Australian Culture TWMBA Academic group: FOART Academic org: Student contribution band: National Priority Teaching ASCED code:
    Contents
    STAFFING:
    Examiner: Shirley Tyler Moderator: Betty Adcock
    RATIONALE:
    Culture and language are integrally related and interdependent. Within the Australian cultural context language is involved in a mutually interactive and affective relationship with socio-cultural norms, values and practices. In order to function effectively within the parameters of the English language environment it is essential that individuals develop an awareness of both the formal requirements of language and the underlying socio-cultural forces which determine its use and interpretation.
    SYNOPSIS:
    Culture is reflected in both the verbal and nonverbal languages used by groups of people. This course will investigate different aspects of Australian culture, such as family, religion, crime and sport, to make comparisons with the students' own cultures and languages. Different media will be used, such as film and print, as a basis for comparison.
    OBJECTIVES:
    On successful completion of the course students will have:
    • increased knowledge and understanding of the English language developed an awareness of the cultural and social dimensions of language developed the capacity to analyse the impact of context on language usage.

    15. Federating Access To Australian Culture: PictureAustralia, Australia Dancing And
    Federating Access to australian culture PictureAustralia, Australia Many institutions use institution specific metadata schemas to describe their
    http://www.nla.gov.au/nla/staffpaper/2003/ayres2.html
    @import url( /stylesheets/nlaweb-tertiary.css); @import url (/stylesheets/about.css); SEARCH: HOME CATALOGUE GUIDES ASK US ... REGISTER FIND FOR HELP ABOUT US VISIT US SHOP
    Staff Papers
    Home About us Staff Papers
    Federating Access to Australian Culture: PictureAustralia, Australia Dancing and MusicAustralia
    A paper presented by Ms Robyn Holmes, Curator of Music, and Dr Marie-Louise Ayres, Project Manager, MusicAustralia, National Library of Australia at OZeCulture 2003 (30-31 July 2003). In one sense, the values underpinning these functions are no different from the values that have always pertained to the National Library:
    • We continue to bring our curatorial scholarship to bear by imagining and selecting what is important to keep, why and for whom. We cater for the whole gamut of audiences and range of purposes, from the in-depth researcher or publisher to the musician, dancer or school student, and assist other organisations. We always think ahead, imagining future needs and future technologies, whilst preserving and maintaining collections and sustaining or migrating past processes. The web is becoming the primary information source for many users.

    16. Crofts
    US indifference to the specificity of australian culture can be seen in the As the most culturally specific, the social realist genre (FJ Holden,
    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."

    17. AJCS Volume 1 Number 1 Graeme Turner (review)
    australian Journal of Cultural Studies Volume 1 Number 1 May 1983 ly withouthaving any meaning or specific signification within the culture.
    http://wwwmcc.murdoch.edu.au/ReadingRoom/serial/AJCS/1.1/Turner2.html
    Australian Journal of Cultural Studies
    Volume 1 Number 1 May 1983
    AJCS Serials Humanities ... Murdoch Graeme Turner, "Australian Inventions": Review of Inventing Australia and two other publications Phil Pearlman, DearAustralian (Sydney: Lansdowne Press, 1982).
    Bruce Bennett, Cross Currents: Magazines and Newspapers in Australian Literature (Sydney: Longmans Cheshire, 1981).
    Richard White, Inventing Australia: Images and Identity 1688-1980 (Sydney: Allen and Unwin, 1981) The Australian Experience Series No. 3. Even the least observant among us would have noted the current boom in Australian cultural history of one mode or another; the publication in which this review appears is one example, and the three books under review here span almost t he full spectrum of modes and approaches. Dear Australian is a popular collec . - tion of letters published in The Australian newspaper; Cross Cunents is a large Iy scholarly collection of essays studying the role of magazines and newspapers ~: in Australia's literary history; and Inventing Australia is a work of social history .. i which owes its title to the currently fashionable notion that history is not com j.,:,'~ ! posed of "facts" but of acceptable fictions. Cross Currents, then, provides primary material for researchers; it is modest ly and intelligently edited by Bruce Bennett who has tried to draw on as wide a range of approaches as possible, perhaps, in order to allow the various ver sions of polemic to balance each other. The modesty of the editorial role is possibly the most contentious feature of the collection; it does suffer from the lack of a strong analysis of the relation between the press, magazines, and literature as provocation to go back to the primary material with enhanced in terest and attention.

    18. Portal Toolkit Invalid Site URL
    Belmont Private Hospital, Brisbane, Australia (Middleton) Given Dr BarryWalsh sargument for the culture-specific (ie North America) nature of DID,
    http://ppv.ovid.com/pt/re/anzj/fulltext.00000929-200501000-00015.htm
    Sorry, the URL specified, http://ppv.ovid.com:80/pt/re/anzj/fulltext.00000929-200501000-00015.htm , is invalid.

    Thank you

    19. The Fight For Australian Culture - Part 4
    While the Australiaspecific part of our culture and civilisation is just over200 years old, the depth of our civilisation goes thousands of years beyond
    http://members.ozemail.com.au/~natinfo/ozcul3-4.htm
    The Fight for Australian Culture - part four
    Notes on Australia's Culture
    1) THE DEPTH OF AUSTRALIA'S CIVILISATION
    It has been said by some that Australia's civilisation and culture has only the experience, depth, and basis of just some 200 years. How wrong they are!
    While the Australia-specific part of our culture and civilisation is just over 200 years old, the depth of our civilisation goes thousands of years beyond that.
    Those that settled Australia did not "step off the boat" as some primitive form of Neanderthal Man, with just some sort of Stone Age civilisation; they arrived here bearing within them some thousands of years of European heritage and civilisation.
    Australian culture was formed using British culture as its basis. Indeed, the formation of modern British culture itself has to a certain extent lent upon a Latin-Greek-French basis. The natural procession of cultural formations explains the mechanics and existence of Australian culture, but in no way negates the remaining fact: Australia processes a distinct and unique national culture of its own.
    Australia is a part of wider European Civilisation and of the wider European Culture; in 1788 we diverged along a path that was different to those of the nations in Europe, but one that nonetheless carried with it

    20. Australian Culture – Authentic Australian Products – Aboriginal Artifacts
    Tips on australian travel tours and australian aboriginal cultures can be Nationally recognised site/organisation specific First Aid qualifications*
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    Article: "The Australian School of Outdoor Technical Training "
    View All Australian Articles WorkCover approved or compliant OHS Induction, Height Safety and Confined Space* training
    Industrial Rope Access training and assessment to Level Three IRAA Outdoor Recreation qualifications to SRO 50299 Diploma level BCG98 General Construction (OHS) qualifications to Cert I level Nationally recognised site/organisation specific First Aid qualifications* Industrial or public safety Access and Rescue qualifications to PUA00 Public Safety Cert IV level Certificate IV in Workplace Training and Assessment On this site you will find information relating to: Competency based training, Equipment Pages: Water Purification Systems. Do you know what systems will keep you from drinking in an infection?

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