Book Description
Includes entries supplied by University of Queensland Library Staff.
Author :
Publisher :
Page : 516 pages
File Size : 50,25 MB
Release : 1977
Category : Australia
ISBN :
Includes entries supplied by University of Queensland Library Staff.
Author : Dianne Johnson
Publisher : Sydney University Press
Page : 240 pages
File Size : 21,44 MB
Release : 2014-02-19
Category : Social Science
ISBN : 1743323875
Written by anthropologist Diane Johnson, Night Skies of Aboriginal Australia has been in demand since its publication in 1998. It is a record of the stars and planets which pass across night-time.
Author : Jeremy Beckett
Publisher : ANU E Press
Page : 104 pages
File Size : 38,59 MB
Release : 2009-09-01
Category : Social Science
ISBN : 1921536934
The 'Corner Country', where Queensland, South Australia and New South Wales now converge, was in Aboriginal tradition crisscrossed by the tracks of the mura, ancestral beings, who named the country as they travelled, linking place to language. Reproduced here is the story of the two Ngatyi, Rainbow Serpents, who travelled from the Paroo to the Flinders Ranges and back as far as Yancannia Creek, where their deep underground channels linked them back to the Paroo. Jeremy Beckett recorded these stories from George Dutton and Alf Barlow in 1957. Luise Hercus, who has worked on the languages in the area for many years, has collaborated with Jeremy Beckett to analyse the names and identify the places.
Author :
Publisher :
Page : 194 pages
File Size : 11,78 MB
Release : 1959
Category : Africa, Southern
ISBN :
Author : W. Ramsay Smith
Publisher : Courier Corporation
Page : 420 pages
File Size : 49,44 MB
Release : 2003-01-01
Category : Social Science
ISBN : 9780486427096
For many of their campfire tales, the aboriginal people of Australia looked to the skies, where they found a twinkling text of morals and stories within their own version of the zodiac. Today, the starry birds, fishes, and dancing men that provided a backdrop to life Down Under for thousands of years have found a new popularity beyond Australia. With this colorful compilation of oral traditions, readers can savor the tales as they were told by their aboriginal narrators. Footnotes throughout the text clarify occasional obscurities, providing background on aboriginal life and customs as the need for explanation arises. For the most part, however, the author allows the myths to speak for themselves, without any attempt to support or disprove anthropological theories. The myths range in nature and tone from reverent recountings of the origins of the world and human life, to legends about the roots of religious and social customs, to fanciful and humorous animal fables. Unabridged republication of Myths and Legends of the Australian Aboriginals, Ballantyne Press-Spottiswoode, Ballantyne & Co. Ltd., London, n.d., ca. 1930. Index. 63 black-and-white illustrations.
Author : Norman Barnett Tindale
Publisher :
Page : pages
File Size : 40,54 MB
Release : 1974
Category :
ISBN :
Author : Margaret Tucker
Publisher :
Page : 205 pages
File Size : 50,26 MB
Release : 1983-01
Category : Aboriginal Australians
ISBN : 9780959262216
Incomplete.
Author : Mark Clendon
Publisher : University of Adelaide Press
Page : 516 pages
File Size : 22,59 MB
Release : 2014-05-12
Category : Language Arts & Disciplines
ISBN : 1922064599
The Kimberley Arafuran language Worrorra was spoken traditionally on the remote coastline and precipitously beautiful hinterland between the Walcott Inlet and the Prince Regent River. The language described here is that attested by its last full speakers, Patsy Lulpunda, Amy Peters and Daisy Utemorrah. Patsy Lulpunda was a child when Europeans first entered her country in 1912, and Amy Peters and Daisy Utemorrah both grew up on the Kunmunya mission. This comprehensive and detailed grammar provides as well an historical and cultural context for a society now drastically altered. In the 1950s Worrorra people left their traditional land and from the 1970s the number of people speaking Worrorra as their first language declined dramatically. Worrorra is a highly polysynthetic language, characterised by overarching concord and a high degree of morphological fusion. Verbal semantics involve a voicing opposition and an extensive system of evidentiality-marking. Worrorra has elaborate systems of pragmatic reference, a derivational morphology that projects agreement-class concord across most lexical categories and complex predicates that incorporate one verb within another. Nouns are distributed among five genders, the intensional properties of which define dynamic oppositions between men and women on the one hand, and earth and sky on the other. This volume will be of interest to morphologists, syntacticians, semanticists, anthropologists, typologists, and readers interested in Australian language and culture generally.
Author : W. E. H. Stanner
Publisher : Sydney University Press
Page : 340 pages
File Size : 28,91 MB
Release : 2014-02-19
Category : Social Science
ISBN : 1743323883
Anthropologist W.E.H. Stanner is perhaps most well known for coining the phrase the 'great Australian silence', addressing the culture of denial or 'conscious forgetting' regarding the history Australia since European arrival. This reprint of On Aboriginal Religion pays tribute to the ongoing relevance of Stanner?s work. His research into Aboriginal religion was first published as a series of articles in the journal Oceania between 1959 and 1963. In 1963 the articles were published as the collection in as Oceania Monograph 11, which was later reprinted as a facsimile edition with introductory sections by Francesca Merlan and Les Hiatt (1989). As Stanner writes in his introduction to the 1963 collection, 'I thought I should take Aboriginal religion as significant in its own right and make it the primary subject of study, rather than study it, as was done so often in the past, mainly to discover the extent to which it expressed or reflected facts and preoccupations of the social order'. It is this dedication to recording the beliefs and observing the practice of Aboriginal religion that has made this monograph so important.
Author : Horace Bell
Publisher :
Page : 508 pages
File Size : 43,15 MB
Release : 1881
Category : California
ISBN :