Digital resources tagged with ‘television documentaries’
see all tags – start a new search
Every digital resource on Film Australia’s Digital Learning site is tagged with descriptive terms. This list shows the resources which are tagged with ‘television documentaries’.
![]() |
Australian television drama Australian content on television reflects our culture and our society. Mac Gudgeon celebrates the importance of Homicide in the history of Australian television production. Stuart Cunningham and Scott Goodings remember some of the popular dramas which showed Australians that they could love Australian programming. |
![]() |
Captain Cook - Cook Claims New South Wales After spending some time observing an Aboriginal tribe, Cook commits the most controversial act of the voyage: he claims the entire east coast of New Holland for Britain, without permission from the local inhabitants. |
![]() |
Captain Cook - Great Southern Continent In his first great voyage of discovery, James Cook is chosen to find and explore the 'Great Southern Land'. |
![]() |
Captain Cook - In Search of the North West Passage Cook’s obsession with discovery continues as he searches for the mythic North West Passage, but is it a journey too far? Now retired and promoted to Post Captain, James Cook is bored. He jumps at the chance to take on a third great voyage: to find a fast route to China to secure Britain’s place in the lucrative tea trade. |
![]() |
Captain Cook - James Cook Joins the Navy Influential patrons help the bright boy James Cook to an apprenticeship in the merchant navy that would make him a ships’ master. But with an eye for the main chance Cook switches to the Royal Navy. |
![]() |
Captain Cook - The Death of Cook James Cook’s temperament has become unstable during the long and unsuccessful hunt for the North West passage. He picks a fight with the Hawaiians after a series of thefts by them from the ships and dies on the beach after a fierce battle. |
![]() |
Captain Cook - The Polynesian Tupaia Joins the Endeavour Voyage Cook takes on board an additional passenger, Polynesian priest and fellow navigator Tupaia. Tupaia shares his remarkable navigational skills, convinced that the notion of a great land mass is a European fantasy. |
![]() |
John Curtin’s Australian Journalists’ Association Badge John Curtin’s journalistic instincts came in handy during World War Two when he kept the media onside with secret press briefings. He wore his AJA badge every day he was in office. |










