The Barossa Folk


Book Description




A History of the Barossa Vintage Festival - Past & Present Events


Book Description

This publication highlights and documents key events over the festival's history since its beginnings in 1947. Its history has been researched, compiled and written by 2021 Barossa Young Ambassador participant, Rebekah Rosenzweig. Learn about the history of the Barossa's much loved biennial event, the Barossa Vintage Festival, as you turn the pages. Featuring many photographs from the archives and community members, this book is sure to bring back memories as the reader reminisces on festivals gone by.




Real Folk


Book Description

Photographs and stories of over 100 musical old-timers tracked down by the author while collecting traditional music over half a life-time in rural Australia. These men and women of character include descendants of British, Irish and German settlers and Kooris. Their instruments range from organs, accordions and violins to gum-leaves and bones.




Food, Power and Community


Book Description

Did Jesus cook? Why do Australians eat so much sugar and drink lots of cold beer? Do our foods have regional flavours? When and why did Australian diets start to show American influences? Did women in early modern England drink to much?




Postcards


Book Description

SA in a day! That's what you'll find inside this latest Postcards collection - a guide to what South Australia has to offer all within an easy day's drive from Adelaide.




Texas Furniture, Volume Two


Book Description

"More examples of Texas' rich heritage of locally made nineteenth-century furniture and information on the craftsmen who produced it"--




An Archaeology of Australia Since 1788


Book Description

This volume provides an important new synthesis of archaeological work carried out in Australia on the post-contact period. It draws on dozens of case studies from a wide geographical and temporal span to explore the daily life of Australians in settings such as convict stations, goldfields, whalers' camps, farms, pastoral estates and urban neighbourhoods. The different conditions experienced by various groups of people are described in detail, including rich and poor, convicts and their superiors, Aboriginal people, women, children, and migrant groups. The social themes of gender, class, ethnicity, status and identity inform every chapter, demonstrating that these are vital parts of human experience, and cannot be separated from archaeologies of industry, urbanization and culture contact. The book engages with a wide range of contemporary discussions and debates within Australian history and the international discipline of historical archaeology. The colonization of Australia was part of the international expansion of European hegemony in the eighteenth and nineteenth century. The material discussed here is thus fundamentally part of the global processes of colonization and the creation of settler societies, the industrial revolution, the development of mass consumer culture, and the emergence of national identities. Drawing out these themes and integrating them with the analysis of archaeological materials highlights the vital relevance of archaeology in modern society.




From Many Places


Book Description

This record of the experience of immigration and settlement in South Australia provides information about the geographic origins, history, cultural traditions and community activities of 97 ethnic groups in South Australia. It is based on the database of South Australian Immigration and Settlement History located in South Australia's Migration Museum, and includes relevant statistics and a bibliography for each group.




The Wakefield Companion to South Australian History


Book Description

Contains hundreds of well-researched, compact entries on events and movements, institutions and industries as well as longer essays on major themes from Aboriginal-European conflict and Aboriginal histories to more recent concerns of wages and water.




Texas Furniture, Volume One


Book Description

The art of furniture making flourished in Texas during the mid-nineteenth century. To document this rich heritage of locally made furniture, Miss Ima Hogg, the well-known philanthropist and collector of American decorative arts, enlisted Lonn Taylor and David B. Warren to research early Texas Furniture and its makers. They spent more than a decade working with museums and private collectors throughout the state to examine and photograph representative examples. They also combed census records, newspapers, and archives for information about cabinetmakers. These efforts resulted in the 1975 publication of Texas Furniture, which quickly became the authoritative reference on this subject. Now updated with an expanded Index of Texas Cabinetmakers that includes information that has come to light since the original publication and corrects errors, Texas Furniture presents a catalog of more than two hundred pieces of furniture, each superbly photographed and accompanied by detailed descriptions of the piece’s maker, date, materials, measurements, history, and owner, as well as an analysis by the authors. The book also includes chapters on the material culture of nineteenth-century Texas and on the tools and techniques of nineteenth-century Texas cabinetmakers, with a special emphasis on the German immigrant cabinetmakers of the Hill Country and Central Texas. The index of Texas cabinetmakers contains biographical information on approximately nine hundred men who made furniture in Texas, and appendices list information on the state’s largest cabinet shops taken from the United States census records.