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Andrew G. Taylor Andrew G. Taylor i(6977044 works by)
Gender: Male
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1 The Smell of Glass Bead Screens : Remembering the Suburban Slideshow Andrew G. Taylor , 2013 single work essay
— Appears in: Locating Suburbia 2013; (p. 52-72)
1 form y separately published work icon Kabbarli Andrew G. Taylor , ( dir. Andrew G. Taylor ) Australia : Resonance Films SBS Independent , 2002 6977091 2002 single work film/TV

'Dressed in stiff Edwardian attire, a 60-year-old woman pitches a small white tent in the scorching sandhills on the edge of the Nullarbor. She reigns in the desert, as a self appointed Queen, and adopts the Aborigines as her subjects. She is known as "kabbarli" (grandmother).

'Daisy Bates died in 1951, an Australian legend. She was a ground-breaking anthropologist, and exceptional linguist and a woman who defied convention. She was also a devout royalist, a fervent believer in the British Empire, and an outrageous snob. Some looked upon her as a saint; a tireless worker for Aboriginal welfare. Others saw her as a manipulative and self-serving do-gooder. She was cantankerous. She was charming ...

'She was also a shameless liar. Masquerading as an immigrant of aristocratic Anglo-Irish descent, a respectable Victorian lady and a journalist for The Times newspaper, she constantly reinvented herself. Recently, it has been revealed that she was a poor child o the Irish potato famine and a bigamist who married the drover, Jack Bates, while she was also secretly married to the infamous Breaker Morant.'

Source: Ronan Films blurb. (Sighted: 31/1/2014)

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