My chapter is ethnographically situated in the Tanami Desert, the home of Warlpiri people and the monsters that haunt, terrorize, and sometimes kill them. Located to the northwest of the center of Australia, first contact came relatively late in this region, and over the past century the Tanami and its human and monstrous inhabitants have experienced dramatic and tumultuous changes. I explore how one particular monster, called Kurdaitcha or Jarnpa, transformed with these changes, and the meanings that flow from this realityFT130100415 is http://purl.org/au-research/grants/arc/FT13010041
The crux of this essay is that birdsong—something generally thought of a pleasing and enjoyable—can ...
Myths of undiscovered animals occupy a prominent place in popular culture, being especially prominen...
Continuity and change in Aboriginal mobility : the Warlpiri of the Central Australian Desert. — This...
The last 100 years have seen Warlpiri people experience drastic changes in ways of being in the worl...
Every field-site has monsters—spooky, menacing, terrifying beings—who lurk in the shadows and the da...
Monsters are culturally meaningful across the world. Starting from this key premise, this book tackl...
Offering a dialogue between anthropology and literature, culture, and media, this book presents fine...
Many societies across the world see birds as providers of information – be it environmental, cultura...
Monsters are culturally meaningful across the world. Starting from this key premise, this book tackl...
This chapter introduces the volume and defines monsters as embodiments of cultural moments. It propo...
Warlpiri people of Central Australia have served on a number of occasions as exemplars of the Derrid...
Abstract: The moon figures prominently in various Australian Aboriginal myths about the origin of de...
Ostensibly about dingoes and dogs, this paper explores aspects of the contemporary social world of W...
Abstract Introduction: Aboriginal People have inhabited the Australian continent since the beginning...
This thesis is based on fieldwork I carried out between December 1987 and June 1989 while living wit...
The crux of this essay is that birdsong—something generally thought of a pleasing and enjoyable—can ...
Myths of undiscovered animals occupy a prominent place in popular culture, being especially prominen...
Continuity and change in Aboriginal mobility : the Warlpiri of the Central Australian Desert. — This...
The last 100 years have seen Warlpiri people experience drastic changes in ways of being in the worl...
Every field-site has monsters—spooky, menacing, terrifying beings—who lurk in the shadows and the da...
Monsters are culturally meaningful across the world. Starting from this key premise, this book tackl...
Offering a dialogue between anthropology and literature, culture, and media, this book presents fine...
Many societies across the world see birds as providers of information – be it environmental, cultura...
Monsters are culturally meaningful across the world. Starting from this key premise, this book tackl...
This chapter introduces the volume and defines monsters as embodiments of cultural moments. It propo...
Warlpiri people of Central Australia have served on a number of occasions as exemplars of the Derrid...
Abstract: The moon figures prominently in various Australian Aboriginal myths about the origin of de...
Ostensibly about dingoes and dogs, this paper explores aspects of the contemporary social world of W...
Abstract Introduction: Aboriginal People have inhabited the Australian continent since the beginning...
This thesis is based on fieldwork I carried out between December 1987 and June 1989 while living wit...
The crux of this essay is that birdsong—something generally thought of a pleasing and enjoyable—can ...
Myths of undiscovered animals occupy a prominent place in popular culture, being especially prominen...
Continuity and change in Aboriginal mobility : the Warlpiri of the Central Australian Desert. — This...