Abstract

Australia has been described as a suburban nation. Suburbanisation has featured heavily in Australia's national development and is the dominant urban form in Australian cities. Home to over 75 per cent of the Australian population, the suburbs, as a physical space, are central to the daily lives of the Australian population. As an imagined space, the suburbs have been a prominent feature in Australia's cultural life and in how the nation's cultural identity is understood. Yet despite this significance, the suburbs are noticeably absent from the nation's cultural policy discussion. This paper explores the tensions, ambiguities and contradictions that arise when suburban Australia is placed within this discussion, and in particular, the intersections that occur between the physical and imagined dimensions of suburbia, and how these are encapsulated both theoretically and on the ground. Findings from a case study indicate that suburban communities have a history of developing and engaging with cultural policy directions.

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