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Issue Details: First known date: 1983... 1983 Words and Worlds : Studies in the Social Role of Verbal Culture
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Notes

  • Indexed selectively; contains non-Austlit material

Contents

* Contents derived from the Sydney, New South Wales,:Sydney Association for Studies in Society and Culture , 1983 version. Please note that other versions/publications may contain different contents. See the Publication Details.
Pioneering Social Realism: William Lane's The Workingman's Paradise, Michael Wilding , single work criticism
Wilding demonstrates that William Lane's The Workingman's Paradiseexplores the traditional appeals, analyses and understandings of socialist propaganda. But Wilding finds that Lane also emphasizes that the propagandists must ensure they live within the propagandized value system before any social change can be effective.
(p. 31-54)
Two Aboriginal Oral Texts from Arnhem Land North Australia, and Their Cultural Context, Margaret Clunies Ross , single work criticism
' This study examines two Aboriginal oral texts, recorded on tape and 16mm. film during the course of a mortuary ritual in Arnhem Land during August, 1978.1 Their subject-matter is similar but their nature as utterance is different, as each belongs to a different oral register. Both texts concern two related sacred forces: the first is a spirit-being, or totem, as it would be called in the older anthropological literature, which takes the shape of a sea-bird named Mulanda and the second is a large black rock, Ngaliya, Mulanda's home. Text 1 is an oration, made by one of the senior men present at the ritual, to a gathering of male participants, shortly after he had supervised the execution of two icons, representing the two sacred forces, on the hollow log ossuary which had been prepared to house the bones of the man in whose honour the mortuary ceremony was held. The speaker has a double audience: he directs himself at times to the eye of the camera, but more often to his Aboriginal hearers. Text 2 is a single song-verse, which belongs to the standardised oral form~ that Aborigines from North-East and North-Central Arnhem Land call manikay. The word is usually translated as "clan-song series". The song-verse in this instance, which also celebrates the same two sacred forces as the oration, formed part of the conventional musical and choreographic accompaniment to the mortuary ritual, whose nature will be described briefly below.' (Publication abstract)

Publication Details of Only Known VersionEarliest 2 Known Versions of

Last amended 24 Feb 2017 14:47:38
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