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L. R. Hiatt L. R. Hiatt i(A26668 works by) (a.k.a. L. Hiatt; Les Hiatt; Lester Richard Hiatt)
Born: Established: 1931 Gilgandra, Gilgandra area, Coonabarabran - Gilgandra - Coonamble area, Central West NSW, New South Wales, ; Died: Ceased: 10 Feb 2008 London,
c
England,
c
c
United Kingdom (UK),
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Western Europe, Europe,

Gender: Male
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Works By

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1 Aboriginal Political Life L. R. Hiatt , 2015 single work criticism
— Appears in: The Wentworth Lectures : Honouring Fifty Years of Australian Indigenous Studies 2015; (p. 59-74)
1 Who Wrote Ten Canoes? L. R. Hiatt , 2007 single work criticism
— Appears in: Quadrant , November vol. 51 no. 11 2007; (p. 70-75)
1 The Rise and Fall of Daisy O'Dwyer L. R. Hiatt , 2006 single work criticism
— Appears in: Australian Aboriginal Studies , no. 2 2006; (p. 111-115)

'The article presents a biography of Daisy Bates, a scholar in the field of Aboriginal history in Australia. It cites the reason why the native race was vanishing according to Bates. She was the foster-daughter of Sir George Outram, a hero of the Indian army buried with full honors in Westminister Abbey, England. She decided to travel to Australia after a doctor diagnosed a spot on her lungs as a warning of tuberculosis.' (Publication abstract)

1 Bennelong and Omai L. R. Hiatt , 2004 single work criticism
— Appears in: Australian Aboriginal Studies , no. 2 2004; (p. 87-89)

'The experience and impact of Bennelong on the London scene is compared to Omai, a Tahitian predecessor who had visited the court 20 years. Bennelong's role as an object of curiosity. How he compared with Omai in this regard is hard to estimate. There could be some truth in saying that while Omai was taken up and cultivated, Bennelong was politely inspected. He seems not to have excited anyone's philosophical, literary or artistic imagination, and there is certainly nothing on record comparable with Granville Sharp's discourses with Omai (Hoare 1820:220-7).No portrait of Bennelong in London has survived, nor evidence that one was ever made. Perhaps the lack of interest merely reflects how readily the exotic is betrayed by familiarity. All the same, some contrasts between the two men and their contexts are worth considering.'  (Publication abstract)

1 Frank Gurrmanamana: 1920s - 8 April 2003 L. R. Hiatt , Kim McKenzie , 2003 single work obituary (for Frank Gurrmanamana )
— Appears in: Australian Aboriginal Studies , no. 2 2003; (p. 136-140)

'One week ago in Canberra, at night, I woke up very early and went outside. It was still a little bit dark, and there was only one star left in the sky. It was the Morning Star—Goyulan. When I was looking at the Morning Star, I heard a bird calling out, calling out from a long way away. In English we call that bird ‘plover’. Its Gidjingarli name is Burreparrepa.  (Introduction)

1 1 y separately published work icon People of the Rivermouth : the Joborr Texts of Frank Gurrmanamana Frank Gurrmanamana , Kim McKenzie , L. R. Hiatt , Canberra : National Museum of Australia Aboriginal Studies Press , 2002 Z1582588 2002 selected work life story This book and CD-ROM are based on 20 texts created by Frank Gurrmanamana in 1960 to explain to anthropologist Les Hiatt the protocols and etiquette of Anbarra society. They follow an imagined life from birth through boyhood, to marriage and to death. The texts are published here in Gidjingarli and English. The CD-ROM presents them in spoken form, and provides a vast body of information about the Anbarra people, their culture, history, land and environment to help us understand the complex world into which we are invited. This publication maintains the ongoing collaboration in research of Frank Gurrmanamana and his family and is a unique account of traditional life, published at a time of immense social change.
1 1 A New Age for an Old People L. R. Hiatt , 1997 single work criticism
— Appears in: Quadrant , June vol. 41 no. 6 1997; (p. 35-40) Approaching Australia : Papers from the Harvard Australian Studies Symposium 1998; (p. 35-40)
1 Pythagoras and the Australian Aborigines : Totemism and Platonism L. R. Hiatt , 1987 single work criticism
— Appears in: Quadrant , December vol. 31 no. 12 1987; (p. 69-72)
1 Harry D L. R. Hiatt , 1986 single work obituary (for Harry "Diama" (Cockle) Mulumbuk )
— Appears in: Australian Aboriginal Studies , no. 2 1986; (p. 70)

'Two people who made important contributions to the film Waiting for Ham/ recently passed away: Harry D., whose name and significance are incorporated in the title, and Peter Barker, the sound recordist.

'Harry D. was born at Kopanga on the Blyth River about 1920. At the age of eighteen he made his way to Darwin, where he got a job in a Chinese laundry. During the war he worked at the Naval base and in various Army camps. After a spell at Oenpelli in the immediate post-war years, employed by a buffalo hunter, he returned to Darwin where the Native Affairs Branch made him a patrol assistant. Later he worked as a tracker for the Police Department.'  (Introduction)

1 Swallowing and Regurgitation in Australian Myth and Rite L. R. Hiatt , 1975 single work essay
— Appears in: Australian Aboriginal Mythology 1975; (p. 143-162)
The author examines Aboriginal myths that highlights 'the motif of swallowing and regurgitation; and illustrations that these are widely connected with the induction of young men into secret religious cults.' (Source: Introduction)
1 Introduction L. R. Hiatt , 1975 single work essay
— Appears in: Australian Aboriginal Mythology 1975; (p. 5-23)
1 y separately published work icon Australian Aboriginal Mythology Australian Aboriginal Mythology : Essays in Honour of W.E.H. Stanner L. R. Hiatt (editor), Canberra : Australian Institute of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Studies , 1975 6959241 1975 anthology criticism essay

'Papers by M. Blows, A.C. van der Leeden, K. Maddock, I.M. White, L.R. Hiatt, J. Beckett and Appendix of translations of A. van Gennep annotated separately.' (Source: TROVE)

4 y separately published work icon On Aboriginal Religion W. E. H. Stanner , Francesca Merlan , L. R. Hiatt , Sydney : University of Sydney , 1964 7096657 1964 single work criticism

A summary of the Book: Murinbada tribe; 1. The lineaments of sacrifice striking resemblances between the form of a bullroarer ceremony and the form of sacrificial ceremonies in more developed religion Ceremony of Punj; 2. Sacramentalism rite and myth - relations between Punj, and circumcision, totemism (all types), myth relating to Punj, other myths, relations between myth and rite, sequences of conduct; 3. Symbolism in the higher rites geometric idiom of ceremonies, symbolizing processes and types 4. The design plan of a riteless myth - the rainbow serpent, the problem of myth variation, three fragmentary accounts (Marithiel, Wagaman, Nangiomeri), analysis of myth, structural plans of 3 dramas; Myth of Kunmanggur, myth of Punj, rite of Punj 5. The design plans of mythless rites circumcision, mortuary, myth of Kulpi; 6. Cosmos and society made correlative - positive features of Murinbada religion, the dynamical or integrative aspect of the rites, and the underlying philosophy; A concluding note - explanation of series and viewpoint from which it was written. (Source: TROVE)

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