Sounding 4 begins with the first narrative of squatter George Russell followed by an echo on magistrate, soldier and later Crown Lands Commissioner for the Western District ‘Flogger’ Fyans. Expansion west and north-west from Geelong soon causes the Colac tribal collapse and later the government-sanctioned revenge massacre of the Gadubanud Cape Otway clans. Then follows the dispossession timeline of the Geelong / Ballarat Wathaurong people and the extensive contributions by Ian D Smith on Aboriginal geography and languages of the west, with clan organization, mechanisms of dispossession, Aboriginal responses, a geography of disruption and Aboriginal perceptions of Europeans in 19th century Victoria. For contrast is a section SANITIZED ‘FRONTIER’ PROFILES OF PROMINENT COLONIALS controlling the countryside until largely replaced by the bankers and gold-diggers. Moving further west is an echo titled WINNING & LOSING THE GRAMPIANS AND THE GLENELG RIVER before a complete reproduction of Dr Jan Critchett’s Distant Field of Murder. Ian Clark and George Russell reveal how the western plains were taken over after the ‘vanishing’ of the Djab Wurrung clans around the Hopkins River. Echoes of the KULIN SUNSET COUNTRY SETTLED and A SCOTTISH ARK GROUNDS AT ARARAT are settler versions largely from local history books of reminiscences by successful sheep and cattle pastoralists such as the Learmonth and Russell family dynasties. The sour joke that the Scots had the land, the Irish the pubs and the English the accent, does no justice to the role of guns, germs and money-making… Modern scholarship birthed echoes titled FRONTIER MAYHEM IN THE FAR WEST which include the tribal resistance of Jupiter, Cocknose, Roger, Doctor, Bumbletoe etc. defeated by the likes of Wathaurong guide Bon Jon with CCL Fyans and the mounted Wurundjeri and Bunurong members of Captain Dana’s Native Police. This is followed by Marie Fels on native police action and A. G. L. Shaw on frontier violence, with Dr Critchett’ overview on Framlingham Aboriginal Mission Station. Sounding 4 concludes with aftermath echoes titled KING DAVID, DAWSON’S INFORMANTS & THE CAMPERDOWN GEORGE OBELISK and echo 74: HINDSIGHTS ON THE CULTURE-CLASH FRONTIER. Part 1 of which is on Redmond Barry, terra nullius and the Bon Jon case and part 2 has historian Henry Reynolds challenging our national self-image.
Of enduring, patient, plodding, regular working habits and disposition. They have a constitution with which upon poor food they continue to work day after day, in bad climates of many and varied kinds... They are slow, methodical, ...
Novel using Central Australian mythology and sorcery beliefs.
9 Greg Ryan, 'Brawn against Brains: Australia, New Zealand and the American “Football Crisis”, 1906–13', Sporting Traditions, vol. 20, no. 2 (May 2004), 26. The Referee, 27 November 1895. The Referee, 13 July 1904.
This insightful examination of the history and extinction of one of Australia's most enduring folkloric beasts--the thylacine, (or Tasmanian tiger)-- challenges conventional theories.
For the first time Samuel Wagan Watson's poetry has been collected into this stunning volume, which includes a final section of all new work.
Nyernila: 9781922045096
A new edition of this classic title.
Weaves Oodgeroo's personal and cultural life with her time on the Tunisian tarmac, where she pleaded with the hijackers on behalf of the passengers, to tell the previously untold story of the tensions that tore at the fabric of one of ...
Finally a book whose time has come: a comprehensive and authoritative centenary history of women's Australian Rules football by the country's two foremost experts in the women's game.
Broome tells the fascinating and sometimes horrifying story of Aborigines in Victoria since white settlement.