At sporting events world-wide, the image of a boxing kangaroo on a green and gold flag is flown by proud Australian spectators. Australia’s national identity has long been based on sporting prowess, inspiring one influential manufacturer to lament in 1945: 'Great deeds in the realms of war and sport have imbued Australians with a full measure of national pride. We should be no less proud of their industrial history, but unfortunately there are few who appreciate the extent of their achievement in less than 150 years.' Despite these stirring words, it is as a sporting nation that Australians, then and now mostly identify. Happily, however, there have been several occasions where industrial design, manufacturing and sport have met to mutual a...
In Creative Nation, sport is distinguished by its almost complete absence, except as a competitor fo...
Industrial design has grown in Australia from a series of unnamed activities clustered about an emer...
Australia is variously characterised as: an 'unlikely paradise of sport', a land of 'muddied clods' ...
After WWII, the memory of conflict and Australian sporting achievements in athletics, tennis and swi...
Stump-jump plows, Sunshine harvesters, Ford and Holden utes (pick-up trucks), Victa lawn mowers, Hil...
Whenever there is a national event or celebration in Australia, favourite sporting heroes (including...
This thesis explores links between perceptions of Australian identity and the national press reporti...
In the history of industrial design in Australia, early British influence gave way to American influ...
Australia's pavilion at the 1970 Japan World Exposition, Osaka, gave physical form to a narrative of...
Australia's sporting success and dominance across a number of sports has been attributed to a variet...
An analysis of some popular Australian icons reveal that their meaning with respect to their use as ...
Australia is the first country to develop an international Olympic caravan to cater for the requirem...
The image appeared on the front page of the Sunday Age the next day, quickly causing controversy, an...
University of Technology Sydney. Faculty of Business.When in 1993 Sydney was awarded the rights to h...
Although there are obvious American influences on Australian popular culture, the term “Americanizat...
In Creative Nation, sport is distinguished by its almost complete absence, except as a competitor fo...
Industrial design has grown in Australia from a series of unnamed activities clustered about an emer...
Australia is variously characterised as: an 'unlikely paradise of sport', a land of 'muddied clods' ...
After WWII, the memory of conflict and Australian sporting achievements in athletics, tennis and swi...
Stump-jump plows, Sunshine harvesters, Ford and Holden utes (pick-up trucks), Victa lawn mowers, Hil...
Whenever there is a national event or celebration in Australia, favourite sporting heroes (including...
This thesis explores links between perceptions of Australian identity and the national press reporti...
In the history of industrial design in Australia, early British influence gave way to American influ...
Australia's pavilion at the 1970 Japan World Exposition, Osaka, gave physical form to a narrative of...
Australia's sporting success and dominance across a number of sports has been attributed to a variet...
An analysis of some popular Australian icons reveal that their meaning with respect to their use as ...
Australia is the first country to develop an international Olympic caravan to cater for the requirem...
The image appeared on the front page of the Sunday Age the next day, quickly causing controversy, an...
University of Technology Sydney. Faculty of Business.When in 1993 Sydney was awarded the rights to h...
Although there are obvious American influences on Australian popular culture, the term “Americanizat...
In Creative Nation, sport is distinguished by its almost complete absence, except as a competitor fo...
Industrial design has grown in Australia from a series of unnamed activities clustered about an emer...
Australia is variously characterised as: an 'unlikely paradise of sport', a land of 'muddied clods' ...