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Singing saltwater country : a journey to the songlines of Carpentaria / John Bradley with Yanyuwa families.

By: Publication details: Crows Nest, N.S.W. : Allen & Unwin, 2010.Description: xxiii, 301 pages, [8] pages of plates : illustrations (some colour), maps, portraits ; 24 cmISBN:
  • 9781742372419
Subject(s): DDC classification:
  • 920.71 BRA
Summary: At twenty, John Bradley was sent to teach Aboriginal children in a school at the remote Borroloola, on the Gulf of Carpentaria in far north Australia. But it is the teacher who is educated by the Yanyuwa elders and their families. Over three decades he learns their language and their country, becoming intimately drawn into other ways of being, both practical and spiritual. With passion and pride they teach him their songlines, relating what they know and value - ancestors, kin, allegiances; places, plants, animals; seasons, ceremonies, stories - and the spirit that sustains all. As we follow John Bradley on his journey, we begin to see that the songlines are keys to the authority and continuity help by Aboriginal Law. We begin to understand why, when a country can no longer be sung, that the Yanyuwa feel it so deeply. And what such loss means to us all. John Bradley also worked with the Yanyuwa as anthropologist on their land claims and sacred sites. He is now deputy director of the Centre for Australian Indigenous Studies at Monash University.
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Item type Current library Call number Status Date due Barcode
Non Fiction Non Fiction Dee Why Library 305.89915 BRA (Browse shelf(Opens below)) Available R81601PSLGS

At twenty, John Bradley was sent to teach Aboriginal children in a school at the remote Borroloola, on the Gulf of Carpentaria in far north Australia. But it is the teacher who is educated by the Yanyuwa elders and their families. Over three decades he learns their language and their country, becoming intimately drawn into other ways of being, both practical and spiritual. With passion and pride they teach him their songlines, relating what they know and value - ancestors, kin, allegiances; places, plants, animals; seasons, ceremonies, stories - and the spirit that sustains all. As we follow John Bradley on his journey, we begin to see that the songlines are keys to the authority and continuity help by Aboriginal Law. We begin to understand why, when a country can no longer be sung, that the Yanyuwa feel it so deeply. And what such loss means to us all. John Bradley also worked with the Yanyuwa as anthropologist on their land claims and sacred sites. He is now deputy director of the Centre for Australian Indigenous Studies at Monash University.

Includes bibliographical notes and index.

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