Two leaves of thesis abstract in pocket or back end paper.Bibliography: leaves 403-437.437 leaves ; 30 cm.Examines the formation of one of the world's great colonial collections, the Australian ethnographic collection of the South Australian Museum. At its narrowest, analyses the transactions between Aborigines and Europeans which generated this collection within the frame of a developing local ethnographic tradition. At its widest, provokes a reexamination of the colonial frontier's role in Aboriginal/European history and a reexamination of the role of the ethnographic object.Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Adelaide, Dept. of History, 1997
The Australian Museum was established in Sydney in 1826. It brought order to Australian nature by co...
This paper considers several areas of anthropological research which have yet to be drawn into conve...
I expect that most readers of Humanities Australia will be familiar with the Australian Institute of...
Deposited with permission of the author. © 2002 Dr. Janice LallyThis is an evaluation of the contrib...
Museums are places of contest and revelation. Ethnographic objects have been too simply perceived a...
This chapter explores the potential for a study of colonial curio dealers’catalogues in producing pa...
In 2017 archaeological evidence was published which indicates that modern humans first arrived in Au...
This thesis returns to Australia’s colonial past through the portal of a significant yet largely ove...
This volume addresses fundamental questions about the nature, value, and efficacy of museum collecti...
Navigating cultural collections in museums can be a particular and challenging task. Indigenous...
The Papuan Official Collection is a unique colonial collection assembled between 1907 and 1938 by go...
Using the collecting of H.J. Hillier and Emile Clement as its basis, this thesis examines the movem...
This special issue contributes to an emerging literature on the materialities of colonial government...
This thesis asks: what are the uses and meanings of Indigenous Australian collections in the UK toda...
From March to November 1948, 17 scientists made up the American-Australian Scientific Expedition (AA...
The Australian Museum was established in Sydney in 1826. It brought order to Australian nature by co...
This paper considers several areas of anthropological research which have yet to be drawn into conve...
I expect that most readers of Humanities Australia will be familiar with the Australian Institute of...
Deposited with permission of the author. © 2002 Dr. Janice LallyThis is an evaluation of the contrib...
Museums are places of contest and revelation. Ethnographic objects have been too simply perceived a...
This chapter explores the potential for a study of colonial curio dealers’catalogues in producing pa...
In 2017 archaeological evidence was published which indicates that modern humans first arrived in Au...
This thesis returns to Australia’s colonial past through the portal of a significant yet largely ove...
This volume addresses fundamental questions about the nature, value, and efficacy of museum collecti...
Navigating cultural collections in museums can be a particular and challenging task. Indigenous...
The Papuan Official Collection is a unique colonial collection assembled between 1907 and 1938 by go...
Using the collecting of H.J. Hillier and Emile Clement as its basis, this thesis examines the movem...
This special issue contributes to an emerging literature on the materialities of colonial government...
This thesis asks: what are the uses and meanings of Indigenous Australian collections in the UK toda...
From March to November 1948, 17 scientists made up the American-Australian Scientific Expedition (AA...
The Australian Museum was established in Sydney in 1826. It brought order to Australian nature by co...
This paper considers several areas of anthropological research which have yet to be drawn into conve...
I expect that most readers of Humanities Australia will be familiar with the Australian Institute of...