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Issue Details: First known date: 1989... 1989 [Review Essay] Children of the Desert II : Myths and Dreams of the Aborigines of Central Australia
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'There would be a number of reasons to pass briefly over this posthumously published second volume of Geza Roheim's Children of the Desert. As Morton notes in his excellent introductory essay, anthropologists have long had a negative disciplinary 'take' on R6heim's psychoanalytic work because of 'his cavalier attitude towards his material' (p xi), a view that is rightly skeptical of the broad narratives of universal humanity in which he embedded most of his interpretations of Aboriginal culture. Roheim is deficient, as Morton (p xxii) says, in lacking 'any close appreciation of ho w the symbolic forms he uncovers relate to larger social processes in any thorough way' W e are certainly not provided with any information, for example, about the indigenous contexts or occasions in which folk tales or dreams, the subject of the present volume, are presented. Social analysis is not Roheim's forte. One might well ask, too, whether the time has passed for considering the significance of Roheim for the understanding of Aboriginal people when the trend is towards themes of historical contact, of the hegemony over Aboriginal people and their local aggregations by the State and by the universalising discourses of development, civilisation, citizenship, and improvement.'  (Introduction)

Publication Details of Only Known VersionEarliest 2 Known Versions of

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    y separately published work icon Australian Aboriginal Studies no. 2 1989 11960255 1989 periodical issue

    'At the time of writing the new Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Commission Bill (ATSIC) had passed through the Senate and awaited final passage through the Lower House. Since the last edition of this journal it is now evident that when the proposed legislation becomes law the Institute will retain its own Act, and will be renamed the Australian Institute of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Studies (AIATSIS). The new Institute will have an Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander majority on its Council which will consist of nine persons, as opposed to the twenty-two members who make up the Council at present. Five Councillors will be appointed by the Minister and will be Aboriginal persons or Torres Strait Islanders. Four will be elected by the membership, comprising all existing members, associate members and corresponding members. There will also be a Research Advisory Committee, of twelve members, including the Principal. Eight will be elected by the membership, and there will be three appointed members of Council. The Research Advisory Committee will make recommendations to Council in relation to applications for research grants and other research matters, as well as making recommendations in relation to membership applications. The functions of the Institute have been revised but it remains an independent statutory authority able to develop its work in continuity with the past.' (Editorial introduction)

    1989
    pg. 85-89
Last amended 28 Sep 2017 11:22:47
85-89 [Review Essay] Children of the Desert II : Myths and Dreams of the Aborigines of Central Australiasmall AustLit logo Australian Aboriginal Studies
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