Women, Rites and Sites

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Aboriginal Women
aboriginal women culture
aboriginal-white relations
Alice Springs
Antikirinja Women's song knowledge
Bush Food
Category=JBSF1
Category=JBSL11
Central Australia
Charlotte Waters
Confer
Contact Experiences
Coober Pedy
cross-cultural anthropology
cultural authority women
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eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_society-politics
ethnographic fieldwork
Finke River
Indigenous gender roles
Indigenous women's sociocultural agency
Key Performers
Lake Eyre Basin
matrilineal power structures
Point McLeay
Pre
ritual knowledge transmission
Senior Women
Simpson Desert
Southern South Australia
Traditional Aboriginal Society
Traditional Knowledge Women
Western Desert
White Law
Women's Ceremonies
Women's Knowledge
Women's Repertoire
Women's Rites
Women’s Ceremonies
Women’s Knowledge
Women’s Repertoire
Women’s Rites
Young Men

Product details

  • ISBN 9780367720117
  • Weight: 470g
  • Dimensions: 138 x 216mm
  • Publication Date: 31 Mar 2021
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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This book challenges a number of widespread preconceptions about Aboriginal society and its interaction with the wider non-Aboriginal society. It builds on recent scholarship that has drastically changed the view of Aboriginal women propagated by nineteenth and early twentieth century reports. These reporters unconsciously based their assessments on their knowledge of their own society; they could not conceive of women undertaking autonomous economic activity. These observations were made by men, and some women, imposing their cultural values on Aboriginal society, and dealing primarily with Aboriginal men. They were influenced by the fact that in white society political and religious power was in the hands of men; they shared the common assumption that the female roles of wife and mother carried as little power and authority in Aboriginal society as they did in western society.

This collection of essays, which includes accounts ranging from traditional societies to societies reacting to decades of interaction with non-Aboriginal culture, explores the active role of women in Aboriginal cultural and religious life.

It demonstrates the cultural authority possessed by women; it records the pivotal role of women as repositories of cultural knowledge and in the struggle to maintain or rebuild the means of passing on that knowledge.

Women, Rites & Sites should be read by all people interested in Aboriginal-white relations, in Aboriginal culture and women's studies.

Peggy Brock is Historian with the Aboriginal Heritage Branch of the Department of Environment and Planning in South Australia. She has researched and written histories of various Aboriginal communities in South Australia including the Adnjamathanha of the north Flinders Ranges and Poonindie Mission on Eyre Peninsula. She is the author of two books and various articles on Aboriginal history.