Australia
Australia is massive, and very sparsely peopled: in size it
rivals the USA, yet its population is just over eighteen million -
little more than that of the Netherlands. This is an ancient land,
and often looks it: in places, it's the most eroded, denuded and
driest of continents, with much of central and western Australia -
the bulk of the country - overwhelmingly arid and flat. In
contrast, its cities - most of which were founded as recently as
the mid-nineteenth century - express a youthful energy.
The most memorable scenery is in the Outback, the vast desert in
the interior of the country west of the Great Dividing Range. Here,
vivid blue skies, cinnamon-red earth, deserted gorges and other
striking geological features as well as bizarre wildlife comprise a
unique ecology - one that has played host to the oldest surviving
human culture for at least fifty thousand years.
The harshness of the interior has forced modern Australia to
become a coastal country. Most of the population lives within 20km
of the ocean, occupying a suburban, southeastern arc extending from
southern Queensland to Adelaide. These urban Australians celebrate
the typical New World values of material self-improvement through
hard work and hard play, with an easy-going vitality that visitors,
especially Europeans, often find refreshingly hedonistic. A sunny
climate also contributes to this exuberance, with an outdoor life
in which a thriving beach culture and the congenial backyard
"barbie" are central.
While visitors might eventually find this Home and Away
lifestyle rather prosaic, there are opportunities - particularly in
the Northern Territory - to gain some experience of Australia's
indigenous peoples and their culture, through visiting ancient art
sites, taking tours and, less easily, making personal contact. Many
Aboriginal people - especially in central Australia - have managed
to maintain their traditional way of life (albeit with some modern
accoutrements), speaking their own languages and living according
to their law (the tjukurpa). Conversely, most Aboriginal people
you'll come across in country towns and cities are victims of what
is scathingly referred to as "welfare colonialism" - a
disempowering system in which, supported by dole cheques and other
subsidies, they often fall prey to a destructive cycle of poverty,
ill-health and alcoholism. There's still a long way to go before
black and white people in Australia can exist on genuinely equal
terms.
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