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This blog has long argued Australia's cultural creep is far more significant than any lingering pangs of cultural cringe.
BBC: Chris Lilley: Australia's finest cultural export?
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Arthur Phillips, an Australian writer, coined the term cultural cringe 48 years ago.
ECONOMIST: The wizards of Oz come of age
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In the arts and entertainment, as we have noted many times before, the cultural cringe has been superseded by a cultural creep.
BBC: Australia: The Consequential Country
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Such a situation almost inevitably produces the characteristic Australian cultural cringe.
ECONOMIST: The wizards of Oz come of age
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Glenda Adams, a novelist who left Sydney for New York in 1962 and returned in 1990, believes the cultural cringe was not entirely a bad thing.
ECONOMIST: The wizards of Oz come of age
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But the larger point, as Engel puts it, is the "sloppy loss of our own distinctive phraseology through sheer idleness, lack of self-awareness and our attitude of cultural cringe".
BBC: Viewpoint: American English is getting on well, thanks
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Is the cultural cringe now well and truly dead?
ECONOMIST: The wizards of Oz come of age
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Robyn Archer, who is the artistic director of the Adelaide Festival, the country's largest cultural showcase, is convinced that Australia will not finally put the cultural cringe to rest until (and unless) its people vote yes in next year's referendum on a republic.
ECONOMIST: The wizards of Oz come of age