Dados Bibliográficos

AUTOR(ES) D.B. Rose , D. Rose , David Bzdak , Joanna Crosby , Seth Vannatta
AFILIAÇÃO(ÕES) Australian National University, Dept. of Gender, Media and Cultural Studies
ANO 1994
TIPO Book
PERIÓDICO Oceania
ISSN 0029-8077
E-ISSN 1834-4461
DOI 10.1002/j.1834-4461.1994.tb02498.x
CITAÇÕES 1
ADICIONADO EM 2025-08-14
MD5 8C783681D46938B02616B3CB87DDAA60
MD5 a929984ccd1e642d4b8c82d649af4d9a
MD5 01D2F5319D1F0617AB630D59BEB171B2
MD5 81183931AC0A1816DBDF2AF9430DF8CA

Resumo

From time to time scholars have posed the question: why have Australian Aborigines not developed cargo cults with the same intensity and flamboyance as their Melanesian neighbours? This discussion evades the implications that Aborigines may have been negligent in their cultural production of responses to colonisation, and seeks to engage with some of the responses some Aboriginal people actually have made to colonisation. Focussing on stories of Ned Kelly, and contrasting them with stories of Captain Cook, the suggestion here is that Aboriginal people's search for a moral European communicates the challenging and provocative possibility that coloniser and colonised can share a moral history and thus can fashion a just society.

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