Desert Dreamers
Format:Paperback
Publisher:Univocal Publishing LLC
Published:15th Feb '16
Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back
In the heart of Australia, on the cracked red earth, among wild vegetation, weathered bush, and dried-up creeks, hundreds of invisible pathways exist that become entangled on the earth's surface, underground, and in the sky, clouds, and wind. The Aboriginal people call them Jukurrpa: “the Dreamings.” This web is the Warlpiri land. Practicing the Dreaming, by ritual art, is for the Warlpiri a way to reactivate their ancestral traditions to connect with the cosmos and respond to current social and political issues.
In 1979, anthropologist Barbara Glowczewski embarked on a journey to study the Warlpiri in the Australian outback. Struggling at once to maintain their traditions and cultural heritage as well as adapting to the continuing secularization and techno-progress of their European Australian counterparts, she takes us into the landscape, artistic rituals, and turmoil of the Warlpiri over three decades. Becoming accepted among Aboriginal families as a translator, and at the same time a negotiator of two vastly different visions of the earth, contemporary Western culture and the ancient indigenous dreaming culture, Glowczewski created a singular document of ethnological fieldwork and of self-transformation and discovery.
"Desert Dreamers is overall a refreshing book to read. It provides a valuable ethnographic analysis, whilst also allowing an insight into the deep learning process involved in the immersive and demanding task of anthropological fieldwork."—Anthropological Forum
ISBN: 9781937561963
Dimensions: 203mm x 127mm x 25mm
Weight: unknown
250 pages