by Jem Smith » 25 Apr 2024, 09:05
I would say that literature is a part of culture, not the other way around.
I live in Australia. It's a mainly English speaking country, although people speak other languages too (Aboriginal languages, like near me there is Yuggera, and languages of people from other countries who have come to live here, like Mandarin, Tagalog, Greek etc.). It's hard to sum up our culture. People have various styles of dress and different diets. I suppose in general people here consume a fair bit of wheat, and most people eat meat (not my family, but we're in the minority with that).
I would say that literature is a part of culture, not the other way around.
I live in Australia. It's a mainly English speaking country, although people speak other languages too (Aboriginal languages, like near me there is Yuggera, and languages of people from other countries who have come to live here, like Mandarin, Tagalog, Greek etc.). It's hard to sum up our culture. People have various styles of dress and different diets. I suppose in general people here consume a fair bit of wheat, and most people eat meat (not my family, but we're in the minority with that).