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Post War Australia

Decent Essays

The statement ‘Developments in popular culture in post-war Australia and their impact on society were influenced in particular by American and British culture’, when taken in reference to the timeline lasting from the 1950’s to the present day, is extremely accurate. Not only did American and British influence affect the Australian lifestyle in the later half of the 20th century, in particular the 1970’s and 80’s; but the rise of developments such as the ‘World Wide Web’ and online ‘Social Networks’ from American origins in the 1990’s and the previous and current decades have had an extremely large influence on the popular culture of the modern nation today.

Even before the lifting of the clouds of the Second Great War, Australia had been …show more content…

Music quickly began to evolve directly from American influences- in particular, the rise of the phenomenon of ‘Rock and Roll’ during the late 1950’s brought music back into popular culture after its usually formal design lost favour. Modern technology such as the record player allowed anyone to play popular music, as well as allowing artists to spread worldwide at a significantly greater pace than ever before. The protest songs used during the civil rights music of the 1960’s began to also have an effect upon Australians in regards to their attitude towards ‘The Blacks’ or Indigenous Australians. This arguably had a major influence on the protests leading into the 1967 referendum granting legal rights to vote for Aboriginal Australians. The genre of rock and roll simply grew into the 1970’s, where the major war that was Vietnam- instigated particularly by the United States- resulted in countless protest songs written by both Australians and those in the US. These songs brought a culture of ‘Hippies’ into mainstream life, with thousands of university age youths spreading into the streets of American cities and protesting the ideals of the government which caused the war in …show more content…

The advancement of television throughout the 60’s and into the modern day carried with it influences directly from the countries of origin. Popular television shows contained aspects of the cultures where they were made, American culture was thoroughly embedded in programmes such as the 1990s sitcom “Friends”, and the culture of the United Kingdom would arise in otherwise irrelevant media such as the 1960’s-present science fiction “Doctor Who”. These subtle aspects- whilst the norm for the countries of origin- were obvious and glaringly different to the culture of Australia. Due to the popularity of foreign television programmes, Australians- particularly youths- began to adopt the cultural themes portrayed within them. Many popular television programmes from the 1980’s to the 1990’s came directly from American

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