"Giver" written by Lois Lowry in 1993 caused a global controversy about his view on obedience, communism, euthanasia. This is a character named Jonas living in a submissive community without color, emotion, love, weather and the most important choice. This community is not as good as the modern Australian community. The Giver community headed by the Elders Council sees the choice as an adventurous and unnecessary concept, so we will not allow you to choose.
Introduction Everyone, good morning. Thank you for inviting me to discuss what I really like, that is Australian stereotypes in Australian contemporary literature. In today's society, contemporary literature encourages young readers to transcend Australian stereotypes. However, Australian contemporary literature still has Australian stereotypes. I chose Australian stereotypes and chose four contemporary Australian texts to strengthen it.
Carlos Tsiolkas was a Greek-Australian writer and wrote "Slap" later adopted for the TV series. This novel integrates Caucasian, Greek, Indian, and Indigenous Australians into a naturally friendship community, proving the true multicultural society of Australia. As he has the ability to write and express himself from experience, he helped to accurately express the emotions of these nationals living in Australia.
In addition to some remarkable exceptions, one of the major multicultural policing challenges in modern Australia is the regulation of the Australian indigenous community 5. Since the early 1980's, Australia's community security challenges are public, It was an academic and political theme. . be careful. Newspaper coverage (eg Sydney Morning Herald on March 23, 1991), academic paper (1990 Cunneen, 1999 Tyler), government report (1994 New South Wales State Department, New South Wales Ombudsman Office, 1994) , And Royal Aboriginal Supervision Commission (Johnston, 1991) generally condemn historical and contemporary ways to regulate indigenous communities. In fact, Elliott Johnston commented on his last nationwide report: "Police intervention in the Australian indigenous peoples' lives is arbitrary, discriminatory, racist and violent" (Johnston , 1991, Vol. 2. 2, 13.2. 3)