• Medientyp: E-Book
  • Titel: Emplaced Myth : Space, Narrative, and Knowledge in Aboriginal Australia and Papua New Guinea
  • Enthält: Frontmatter -- ; Contents -- ; Acknowledgments -- ; Introduction / Rumsey, Alan --
    1. Tracks, Traces, and Links to Land in Aboriginal Australia, New Guinea, and Beyond / Rumsey, Alan --
    2. The Politics of Religious Secrecy / Wassmann, Jürg --
    3. Condensed Mapping: Myth and the Folding of Space / Space and the Folding of Myth / Wagner, Roy --
    4. Origins versus Creative Powers: The Interplay of Movement and Fixity / Stewart, Pamela J. / Strathern, Andrew --
    5. Sacred Site, Ancestral Clearing, and Environmental Ethics / Rose, Deborah Bird --
    6. Places That Move / Redmond, Anthony --
    7. Strangelove’s Dilemma: Or, What Kind of Secrecy Do the Ngarrindjeri Practice? / Weiner, James F. --
    8. The Underground Life of Capitalism: Space, Persons, and Money in Bali (West New Britain) / Lattas, Andrew --
    9. From Totemic Space to Cyberspace: Transformations in Sepik River and Aboriginal Australian Myth, Knowledge, and Art / Silverman, Eric Kline --
    10. The Object in View: Aborigines, Melanesians, and Museums / Bolton, Lissant --
    Afterword / Weiner, James F. --
    References -- ; Contributors -- ; Index
  • Beteiligte: Rumsey, Alan [Sonstige Person, Familie und Körperschaft]; Weiner, James F. [Sonstige Person, Familie und Körperschaft]
  • Erschienen: Honolulu: University of Hawaii Press, 2000
  • Umfang: 1 Online-Ressource
  • Sprache: Englisch
  • DOI: 10.21313/9780824843946
  • ISBN: 9780824843946
  • Identifikator:
  • Schlagwörter: Sacred space Melanesia Congresses ; Papuans Land tenure Congresses ; Philosophy, Papuan Congresses ; Sacred space Australia Congresses ; Philosophy, Aboriginal Australian Congresses ; Aboriginal Australians Land tenure Congresses ; SOCIAL SCIENCE / Anthropology / Cultural & Social
  • Entstehung:
  • Anmerkungen: In English
    Mode of access: Internet via World Wide Web
  • Beschreibung: Australia and Papua New Guinea share a number of important social, cultural, and historical features, making a sustained comparison between the two especially productive. This volume is the first in-depth work to do just that: it situates the ethnography of the two areas within a comparative framework and examines the relationship between indigenous systems of knowledge and "place"--an issue of growing concern to anthropologists. The essays demonstrate the manner in which regimes of restricted knowledge serve to protect and augment cultural property and the proprietorship over sites and territory; how myths evolve to explain and culturally appropriate important events pertaining to contact between indigenous and Western societies; how graphic designs and other culturally important iconic and iconographic processes provide conduits of cross-cultural appropriation between indigenous and non-indigenous societies in today's multicultural nation states.Contributors: Lissant Boltan, Andrew Lattas, Anthony Redmond, Alan Rumsey, Deborah Bird Rose, Eric Kline Silverman, Pamela J. Stewart, Andrew Strathern, Roy Wagner, Jurg Wassmann, James F. Weiner.
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