Journal Article
Permanent URI for this collection
Browse
Browsing Journal Article by Subject "Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Cultural Studies"
Now showing 1 - 16 of 16
Results Per Page
Sort Options
- PublicationAnd the (Undergraduate) teaching of Australian Folklore/FolklifeIn 1998 there appeared a revised second edition of Graham Seal's 'The Hidden Culture: Folklore in Australian Society'. Originally the book had been issued by the Oxford University Press in 1989, and then reprinted in 1993. Long the main and,indeed, only teaching text for its subject - despite the fact that it was not written for that specific purpose - it has now been modified in various ways in the light of its writer's views and teaching, and has also been responsive to many changes in Australian society and in its culture.
- PublicationAustralia's Globalisation - Cultural Annihilation of Cultural Understanding?In 'Australian Folklore' no.12 (1997) there appeared the present writer's 'A Global Language but a Regional Culture', a response in some measure to the release that year in Australia of David Crystal's 'English as a global language'. Both the article and the book endeavoured to come to grips with the seemingly inevitable forward march of English to the detriment or even loss of so many other world major and minor languages. The catalytic forces causing this progress were deemed to be "historical (i.e. imperial or trade/missionary/marine) and cultural ... [arising from] political developments; access to knowledge ... the media ... international travel and [being in] the serendipitous 'right place at the right time'."
- PublicationAustralian Folklore: A Yearly Journal of Folklore Studies - An issue dealing specifically with regional outreaches and reflections'Australian Folklore' is the journal of the Australian Folklore Association, Inc. It is published yearly in the Southern Hemisphere Spring, i.e. in August/September. Prices and details of back issues available are listed inside the back cover. 'Australian Folklore' is a peer-reviewed journal, maintaining its high quality through the engagement of Australian research with the global research community. It has long been listed by the Modern Language Association, and many papers from it cited in the MLA's selective Annual Bibliography and indices. A similar treatment is accorded by the Modern Humanities Research Association in its ABELL, both in its Traditional Culture and other appropriate sections. In Australia, it is an ERA-listed journal.
- PublicationAustralian Folklore: A Yearly Journal of Folklore Studies - An issue treating particularly of the New Storytelling, of Heritage Matters and of distinctive Varieties of (Australian) EnglishThis annual volume from the Australian Folklore Association is a sequel both to that body's earlier publications and to the Proceedings of the earlier Conferences (issued under various auspices and in differing formats). Its style and contents have, alike, been shaped in response to the various developing strands observable in folkloristics both in Australia and overseas.It is thus concerned to reflect something of the mood of general appraisal which has been felt in the field recently, particularly in Britain. Attention has also been paid to the various surveys that have been felt appropriate here in Australia as Federation approaches, and as we reflect on the fact that, in 2001, this country will host for the first time in its forty year history the prestigious World Congress of the International Society for Folk Narrative Research.
- PublicationAustralian Folklore: A Yearly Journal of Folklore Studies - Journal Number 8, August 1993This present journal can be said to have many more contributors than any of its predecessors. This is the result of a deliberate policy of involving numerous persons, both collectors and analysers, in the task of recording and publishing materials from this vast and largely neglected field of Australian narrative, custom, lexis and behaviour pattern. Thus lore, folk speech, nicknames, multicultural activity and certain religious observances all find their place in this issue. The number of notes and comments, like that of the book reviews, also shows an increase.
- PublicationThe Bear and the Water: A Study in Mythological EtymologyBecause of the elementary state of comparative philology and dialectology for the Australian aboriginal languages, there has not as yet been any considerable study of roots and root residuums. The following account of one such set of concepts is offered as a study of the interaction of etymology and folklore, since each throws light on the other. The words in question are those for 'bear' and 'water' in the languages of Victoria and the North Coast of New South Wales. One cannot but be struck with the vast amount of curious legendary lore which is bound up in Australian native words. The root itself, the expression of a general and material concept, may have a residuum of folklore adhering to it in the legends of one tribe. It is tempting to feel that the word and the allied concepts may have been adopted into other dialects by the agency of intermediate neighbouring tribes.
- PublicationCulturally strong childcare programs for Indigenous children, families and communitiesAccommodating the diverse childcare needs of Australia's Indigenous communities, both within mainstream and Indigenous-operated services, is a major concern for all Indigenous families and communities. Of particular concern in relation to formal child care is the need for programs to be culturally strong. Culturally strong programs incorporate the culturally based beliefs, values and practices, including child-rearing practices, of individuals, families and communities using that service. This paper, drawing upon a broad-based consultation funded by the Australian Government and conducted throughout 2005–06, addresses the key elements of what constitutes culturally strong childcare programs for Indigenous children, families and communities. In recognition of the heterogeneous nature of Indigenous Australians, the research methods included focus groups, community consultations, and interviews with key stakeholders in the childcare sector nationally in order to identify their positions. The research findings highlighted that those involved with childcare programs for Indigenous children, whether they are living in a remote community in the Northern Territory or in Redfern in Sydney, New South Wales, share a similar desire: that programs reflect the cultural knowledge and practices of their respective communities.
- PublicationEditorial - Australian Folklore: A Yearly Journal of Folklore Studies - An issue dealing specifically with our Celtic Identity; and Music beyond the BalladThis issue, one somewhat delayed, is, by its contents and thought, a living proof of the increasing dynamic of the discipline of folklore - and of the greater understanding of all folkloric matters, in this country, even as it is also a defiance of the now so fashionable MOOCS (multiple online on line courses, and their bland and yet often sweeping conclusions) as exist on this same field. And it indicates also the need for the general reader to realize, and to reflect deeply, on the mass of significant, but abrasive and temperamentally destructive issues that come under this rubric, and that are filling to overflow our once more traditional daily lives. Accordingly, we have taken the perhaps quaint step of indexing our journal's pages into the divisions of Names (personal and place), and then of Subjects / Themes as they are to be found in the articles in this issue. In a very real sense, too, we have made the decision to expand, even more assertively, the area of our field, it now to consider general and proximate fields of study, as highly significant areas for our research, analysis, and scholarly reporting and interpreting. Thus we have continued with our very natural existing interest in Indonesia and so in its religious / mental climate, and the forms of extremism that have so tragically occurred.
- PublicationEditorial - Australian Folklore: Journal Number 8, August 1993As was requested by Bill Wan nan in correspondence, an attempt has also been made to include certain controversial materials which are now placed at the front of the journal. Otherwise the main sequence of articles is roughly chronological. As in issue No. 7, relevant new poetry from (folk) writers is included, not least because of its emphasis on memory, place and on earlier experience which has often been transmitted orally. It will be obvious that some of the other contents owe their inclusion to discussion at the Fifth National conference (1992) and one piece to the Fourth (1990). Yet others have been sparked off by the contents of Australian Folklore 7 (1992). Pleasingly there is now included material in the areas of contemporary legend, oral history, and children's lore, as well as a number of 'Anglo-Celtic' items, - the last being particularly appropriate in view of the present dynamic scholarship worldwide on the Celtic diaspora. And Joan MacDonald's paper would certainly complement the Scottish sections of Hilda Ellis Davidson (ed.) 'The Seer in Celtic and Other Traditions', Edinburgh (1989).
- PublicationEric W. Dunlop (1910-1974) and the Teaching of Traditional Culture in New England"A folk museum is concerned with the daily life and work of people in past ages. For instance, Experiment Farm Cottage at Parramatta, NSW, is intended to catch the atmosphere of a well-to-do gentleman's home in colonial days, and the Museum of Education at Armidale, NSW, recreates a classroom of the last century to show the conditions in which children were then taught." These words come from the authoritative article on Folk Museums in Australia, published posthumously as a perspective on a remarkable and by then national movement for which the writer, Eric Dunlop, could have claimed considerable personal credit. Styling such displays, usually in historic and appropriate buildings, as 'more-specialised' than usual museums, Dunlop then argued that 'more comprehensive folk museums aim at a wider overall view of lifestyle, work, hobbies and pastimes, continuing: "The display must attempt seriously to answer such questions, either by realistic recreation of period rooms and buildings or by orderly arrangement of material in sections displaying various aspects of the past."
- PublicationGilgandra and The Governor BrothersThe following poem and notes on the Old Jail at Dubbo were alike selected by L.J. Anderson, Honorary Secretary of the Gilgandra Museum and Historical Society. He is also responsible for arranging for the photograph of the Mawbey grave to be taken. There has been considerable interest in the Breelong murders and their even more tragic sequel, particularly since the more recent treatments of the theme by the late Frank Clune and by the novelist, Thomas Keneally, The matter which was also made a focus in 'The North West Magazine' for 7th January, 1974, has had numerous semi-popular treatments since 1945. The whole cluster of documents and references are published together, pending an exhaustive study of a theme which has haunted both press and imaginative writers as one of the most human and tragic instances of aboriginal and white settler confrontation.
- PublicationISFNR and 2001The International Society for Folk Narrative Research (ISFNR), which will convene in Melbourne in two years' time for its thirteenth congress, is self described as "a Scientific society whose objectives are to develop scholarly work in the fields of folk narrative research and to stimulate contracts and the exchange of views among its members". This mission statement stresses alike the international purpose and the method of achieving it, by means of its academy-like nature, of membership by election and what were long the very personal nature of exchanges of Euro-centred views - those most easily achieved by the fact that only the 1995 conference in Mysore had been held out of Europe, and this despite its having executive members who 'represent Africa, Asia, Europe, North America, and South America', as well as some others.
- PublicationKevin Gilbert, a shaper of the modern lore of his folkIn the autumn of this year there died the Aboriginal activist, artist and writer Kevin Gilbert, who was born on the banks of the Kalara [Lachlan] River at Condobolin, New South Wales, on 10 July 1933. The youngest of the eight children of Jack Gilbert and Rachel Naden, and orphaned at seven, his early life was harshly spent 'on the receiving end of White Australia's apartheid system', segregated, and lacking any social service payments, while as a teenager he saw 'my brothers who had served in the second world war as enlisted men hunted like felons from the bar of a pub'. As he wrote trenchantly in 1988 (p.185) "I was born Black. Black and honest in a white society that spoke oh so easily of 'justice', 'democracy', 'fair go', 'Christian love', and had me and mine living in old tin sheds ... under ... treasures ... from the white man's rubbish tip." Returned from orphanages to the Wiradjuri country at the age of eleven, he picked grapes and did other seasonal work in the process of finding 'my reality, my people', when "with all the rags [and] little tucker, ours was a greater love, greater truth and being, a greater spirituality than any one of the white Christians ever possessed." (186) These seminal bonding experiences are enshrined in his 1968 drama 'The Cherry Pickers', a milestone stage text which presents with unswerving integrity the seemingly squalid yet magnificently warm lifestyle of a family of eleven.
- PublicationSome Aboriginal Place-Names in the Richmond Tweed AreaThe subject of toponymy or the study of place-names has long been viewed with suspicion in Australia and consigned by serious scholars to some sort of lunatic fringe where the amateur antiquarian and etymologist have been allowed to sport themselves unchallenged. The bulk of the work to date has been occasional in appearance, uneven in scholarship and vague as to its overall aims. The reasons for this state of affairs in Australia would seem to be obvious - the subject has belonged to no recognized field and has not appealed sufficiently to any discipline ; the records are, at best, fragmentary and no general system of attack has been evolved ; the often ridiculous views of uninformed individuals have gained wide currency through the press ; no system of close analysis of the names of a given area has ever been given the correct sort of publicity. In view of the recently awakened interest in Australian place-names, it should be of interest to members of this society to see some of the methods of approach and analysis applied to names in an area with which they will already be reasonably familiar. It was noted of the subject in the British Isles that "The study of place-names may be said to stand to history and ethnology in somewhat the same relation as the study of fossils stands to geology. Each group or set of fossils represents, with more or less strictness, a distinct age of geologic time as, roughly speaking, does each group of place names represent a period of historic or prehistoric time." For Australia the statement needs modification, since Australia's early history was not recorded and before the coming of the white man the Aboriginal native knew no writing and kept no records. What history the Aboriginal names tell us is scarcely political or even tribal but rather concerned with the social life, the flora and the fauna and the prominent features of the topography. Aboriginal names in our area are a fair proportion of the whole, but where they have survived and not been replaced, in many instances there is no known interpretation of the significance. In spite of this limitation, the names do tell us something of the various matters once deemed worthy of attention and designation in the surrounding landscape.
- PublicationSome Place Names in New England. Part I: Aboriginal NamesThe subject of toponomy or the study of place names has long been viewed with suspicion in Australia and consigned by serious scholars to some sort of lunatic fringe where the amateur antiquarian and etymologist have been allowed to sport themselves unchallenged. The bulk of the work done to date has been occasional in appearance, uneven in scholarship and value as to its overall aims. The reasons for this state of affairs in Australia would seem to be obvious - the subject has belonged to no recognised field and has not appealed sufficiently to any discipline; the records are, at best, fragmentary, and no general system of attack has been evolved; the often ridiculous views of uninformed individuals have gained wide currency through the press; no system of close analysis of the names of a given area has ever been given the correct sort of publicity. In view of the recently awakened interest in Australian place names, it should be of interest to members of this society to see some of the methods of approach and analysis applied to names in an area with which they will already be reasonably familiar.
- PublicationWorking with the Indigenous Community in the Pathways to Prevention Project(Australian Institute of Family Studies, 2006)
;Lamb, Cherie ;Homel, RossFreiberg, KateThe purpose of this article is to reflect on some of the work of the Pathways to Prevention Project , particularly as it has involved the local Indigenous population. A key objective is to demonstrate the inter-connectedness of the issues and challenges that Indigenous parents and children face, and hence to put the "doing" of prevention work into a rich developmental ecological and community framework. We draw on two case studies to illustrate our arguments.