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Restoring the Chain of Memory - T.G.H. Strehlow and the Repatriation of Australian Indigenous Knowledge (Paperback)
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Restoring the Chain of Memory - T.G.H. Strehlow and the Repatriation of Australian Indigenous Knowledge (Paperback)
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Restoring the Chain of Memory describes and analyses the writings
and records compiled by the notable linguist, T.G.H. Strehlow
(1908-1978), on Australian Aboriginal Religions, particularly as
practised by the Arrernte of Central Australia. During numerous
research trips between 1932 and 1966, the local Indigenous Arrernte
Elders entrusted him with sacred objects, allowed him to film their
secret rituals and record their songs, partly because he was
regarded as one of them, an 'insider', who they believed would help
preserve their ancient traditions in the face of threats posed by
outside forces. Strehlow characterized Arrernte society as
'personal monototemism in a polytotemic community'. This concept
provides an important insight into understanding how Arrernte
society was traditionally organized and how the societal structure
was re-enforced by carefully organized rituals. Strehlow's research
into this complex societal system is here examined both in terms of
its meaning and current application and with reference to how the
societal structure traditionally was interwoven into religious
understandings of the world. It exemplifies precisely how the
'insider-outsider' problem is embodied in one individual: he was
accepted by the Arrernte people as an insider who used this
knowledge to interpret Arrernte culture for non-Indigenous
audiences (outsiders). This volume documents how Strehlow's works
are contributing to the current repatriation by Australian
Aboriginal leaders of rituals, ancient songs, meanings associated
with sacred objects and genealogies, much of which by the 1950s had
been lost through the processes of colonization, missionary
influences and Australian governmental interference in the lives of
Indigenous societies.
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