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People and Change in Australia arose from a conviction that more
needs to be done in anthropology to give a fuller sense of the
changing lives and circumstances of Australian indigenous
communities and people. Much anthropological and public discussion
remains embedded in traditionalizing views of indigenous people,
and in accounts that seem to underline essential and apparently
timeless difference. In this volume the editors and contributors
assume that "the person" is socially defined and reconfigured as
contexts change, both immediate and historical. Essays in this
collection are grounded in Australian locales commonly termed
"remote." These indigenous communities were largely established as
residential concentrations by Australian governments, some first as
missions, most in areas that many of the indigenous people involved
consider their homelands. A number of these settlements were
located in proximity to settler industries including pastoralism,
market-gardening, and mining. These are the locales that many
non-indigenous Australians think of as the homes of the most
traditional indigenous communities and people. The contributors
discuss the changing circumstances of indigenous people who
originate from such places. Some remain, while others travel far
afield. The accounts reveal a diversity of experiences and
histories that involve major dynamics of disembedding from country
and home locales, and re-embedding in new contexts, and
reconfigurations of relatedness. The essays explore dimensions of
change and continuity in childhood experience and socialization in
a desert community; the influence of Christianity in fostering both
individuation and relatedness in northeast Arnhem Land; the
diaspora of Central Australian Warlpiri people to cities and the
forms of life and livelihood they make there; adolescent
experiences of schooling away from home communities; youth in
kin-based heavy metal gangs configuring new identities, and
indigenous people of southeast Australia reflecting on whether an
"Aboriginal way" can be sustained. The volume takes a step toward
understanding the relation between changing circumstances and
changing lives of indigenous Australians today and provides a sense
of the quality and the feel of those lives.
The highlanders of New Guinea are renowned for their elaborate
systems of ceremonial exchange. Although much has been written
about them, previous accounts have concentrated far less on the
conduct of exchange events than on the structure of exchange
systems. This 1991 book deals centrally with the conduct of
particular exchange events, and shows through examination of them
how larger social structures are reproduced and transformed. As
part of the emphasis on exchange as social action, the book closely
examines the oratory that plays a crucial part in the events.
Basing their study on original fieldwork carried out in the
Nebilyer Valley, Francesca Merlan and Alan Rumsey focus on an inter
related set of large-scale compensation payments which arose out of
an episode of warfare. This book furthers our understanding of the
interaction between social structures and historical events; and
particularly of the crucial role of talk. It will be of special
interest to anthropologists and linguists.
In Dynamics of Difference in Australia, Francesca Merlan examines
relations between indigenous and nonindigenous people from the
events of early exploration and colonial endeavors to the present
day. From face-to-face interactions to national and geopolitical
affairs, the book illuminates the dimensions of difference that are
revealed by these encounters: what indigenous and nonindigenous
people pay attention to, what they value, what preconceived notions
each possesses, and what their responses are to the Other. Basing
her analysis on her extensive fieldwork in northern Australia,
Merlan highlights the asymmetries in the exchanges between the
settler majority and the indigenous minority, looking at everything
from forms of violence and material transactions, to indigenous
involvement in resource development, to governmental intervention
in indigenous affairs. Merlan frames the book within the current
debate in Australian society concerning the constitutional
recognition of indigenous people by the nation-state. Surveying the
precursors to this question and its continuing and unresolved
nature, she chronicles the ways in which an indigenous minority can
remain culturally different while simultaneously experiencing the
transformative forces of domination, constraint, and inequality.
Conducting an investigation of long-term change against the
backdrop of a highly salient and timely public debate surrounding
indigenous issues, Dynamics of Difference has far-reaching
implications both for public policy and for current theoretical
debates about the nature of sociocultural continuity and change.
The highlanders of New Guinea are renowned for their elaborate
systems of ceremonial exchange. Although much has been written
about them, previous accounts have concentrated far less on the
conduct of exchange events than on the structure of exchange
systems. This 1991 book deals centrally with the conduct of
particular exchange events, and shows through examination of them
how larger social structures are reproduced and transformed. As
part of the emphasis on exchange as social action, the book closely
examines the oratory that plays a crucial part in the events.
Basing their study on original fieldwork carried out in the
Nebilyer Valley, Francesca Merlan and Alan Rumsey focus on an inter
related set of large-scale compensation payments which arose out of
an episode of warfare. This book furthers our understanding of the
interaction between social structures and historical events; and
particularly of the crucial role of talk. It will be of special
interest to anthropologists and linguists.
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.
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