Description

Book Synopsis
Surprisingly little research has been carried out about how Australian Aboriginal children and teenagers experience life, shape their social world, and imagine the future. This volume presents recent and original studies of life experiences outside the institutional settings of childcare and education...

Trade Review

The book’s strength lies in revealing aspects of Aboriginal pedagogy, sociality, and identity within complex intercultural environments. It covers a range of central Australian locations and language groups and connects the classical with the contemporary in both Aboriginal society and Australian anthropology. For its size—10 chapters in under 300 pages—its coverage is impressive. · Anthropological Forum: A Journal of Social Anthropology and Comparative Sociology

This is a timely collection, given the rise of interest in childhood studies in the social and behavioural sciences and following the growth in emphasis on Aboriginal childhood by the Australian state over the last decades….The chapters of this volume each have distinctive strengths in their observation of Aboriginal social relationships. · Oceania

Besides its value in exploring the manifold significance of childhoods, this collection will reassure anthropologists about the contemporary relevance of classical anthropology, in this case to shed light on what is happening in remote Aboriginal Australia. Several of the papers are gems, all are valuable, and the whole is richly rewarding in ways I can only hint at here…The authors provide some remarkable insights into the process of becoming a person in desert societies, a process that is anything but mechanical. · JRAI

“Growing Up in Central Australia is a worthwhile contribution to one of the original questions of 20th century anthropology: the relationship between childrearing, childhood experience, and culture…Given that Aboriginal (and other indigenous) people confront such rapid change, and that such large percentages of their populations are young, and that—as they say—children are the future, the volume surely represents a direction that will be of increasing importance in the future of these societies and of anthropological accounts of them.” · Anthropology Review Database

I can recommend this volume to those interested in expanding their library on the anthropology of childhood and, more specifically to scholars interested in culture and parenting, how infants become persons, role and fantasy play, peer relations in childhood and, especially, adolescent response to social change and globalisation. · TAJA. The Australian Journal of Anthropology

There is still a very long way to go in understanding the lives Aboriginal children live today, but this book is a long overdue and much welcome first step. · Children & Society

This excellent volume presents… a rich and timely collection of essays on contemporary Aboriginal childhood and youth, each chapter being grounded on extensive ethnographic experiences and studies…It is an original contribution to a growing field, namely the anthropology of childhood and youth…and offers ‘food for thought’ and a range of perspectives which allow the reader to better appreciate Aboriginal lives, challenges and points of view. · Sylvie Poirier, Université Laval, Québec



Table of Contents

Figures
Acknowledgments
Map of Australia

Introduction: Aboriginal Children and Young People in Focus

PART I: CHILDHOOD ACROSS TIME: HISTORICAL AND LIFE SPAN PERSPECTIVES

Chapter 1. 'Less was hidden among these children': Géza Róheim, Anthropology and the Politics of Aboriginal Childhood
John Morton

Chapter 2. Envisioning Lives at Ernabella
Katrina Tjitayi and Sandra Lewis

Chapter 3. Warungka: Becoming and Un-becoming a Warlpiri Person
Yasmine Musharbash

Chapter 4. Fathers and Sons, Trajectories of Self – Reflections on Pintupi Lives and Futures
Fred R. Myers

PART II: STORIES, LANGUAGE AND SOCIAL SPACE

Chapter 5.Sand Storytelling – Its Social Meaning in Anangu Children’s Lives
Ute Eickelkamp

Chapter 6.Young Children's Social Meaning-Making in a New Mixed Language
Carmel O'Shannessey

Appendix

Chapter 7.The Yard Craig
San Roque

PART III: YOUTH, IDENTITY AND SOCIAL TRANSFORMATION

Chapter 8. Organization within Disorder – The Present and Future of Young People in the Ngaanyatjarra Lands
David Brooks

Chapter 9. Being Mardu: Change and Challenge for Some Western Desert Young People Today
Myrna Tonkinson

Chapter 10. Invisible and Visible Loyalties in Racialized Contexts: A Systemic Perspective on Aboriginal Youth
Marika Moisseeff

Appendix

Notes on Contributors
References
Index

Growing Up in Central Australia New

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      Publisher: Berghahn Books
      Publication Date: 6/1/2011 12:00:00 AM
      ISBN13: 9780857450821, 978-0857450821
      ISBN10: 0857450824

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      Surprisingly little research has been carried out about how Australian Aboriginal children and teenagers experience life, shape their social world, and imagine the future. This volume presents recent and original studies of life experiences outside the institutional settings of childcare and education...

      Trade Review

      The book’s strength lies in revealing aspects of Aboriginal pedagogy, sociality, and identity within complex intercultural environments. It covers a range of central Australian locations and language groups and connects the classical with the contemporary in both Aboriginal society and Australian anthropology. For its size—10 chapters in under 300 pages—its coverage is impressive. · Anthropological Forum: A Journal of Social Anthropology and Comparative Sociology

      This is a timely collection, given the rise of interest in childhood studies in the social and behavioural sciences and following the growth in emphasis on Aboriginal childhood by the Australian state over the last decades….The chapters of this volume each have distinctive strengths in their observation of Aboriginal social relationships. · Oceania

      Besides its value in exploring the manifold significance of childhoods, this collection will reassure anthropologists about the contemporary relevance of classical anthropology, in this case to shed light on what is happening in remote Aboriginal Australia. Several of the papers are gems, all are valuable, and the whole is richly rewarding in ways I can only hint at here…The authors provide some remarkable insights into the process of becoming a person in desert societies, a process that is anything but mechanical. · JRAI

      “Growing Up in Central Australia is a worthwhile contribution to one of the original questions of 20th century anthropology: the relationship between childrearing, childhood experience, and culture…Given that Aboriginal (and other indigenous) people confront such rapid change, and that such large percentages of their populations are young, and that—as they say—children are the future, the volume surely represents a direction that will be of increasing importance in the future of these societies and of anthropological accounts of them.” · Anthropology Review Database

      I can recommend this volume to those interested in expanding their library on the anthropology of childhood and, more specifically to scholars interested in culture and parenting, how infants become persons, role and fantasy play, peer relations in childhood and, especially, adolescent response to social change and globalisation. · TAJA. The Australian Journal of Anthropology

      There is still a very long way to go in understanding the lives Aboriginal children live today, but this book is a long overdue and much welcome first step. · Children & Society

      This excellent volume presents… a rich and timely collection of essays on contemporary Aboriginal childhood and youth, each chapter being grounded on extensive ethnographic experiences and studies…It is an original contribution to a growing field, namely the anthropology of childhood and youth…and offers ‘food for thought’ and a range of perspectives which allow the reader to better appreciate Aboriginal lives, challenges and points of view. · Sylvie Poirier, Université Laval, Québec



      Table of Contents

      Figures
      Acknowledgments
      Map of Australia

      Introduction: Aboriginal Children and Young People in Focus

      PART I: CHILDHOOD ACROSS TIME: HISTORICAL AND LIFE SPAN PERSPECTIVES

      Chapter 1. 'Less was hidden among these children': Géza Róheim, Anthropology and the Politics of Aboriginal Childhood
      John Morton

      Chapter 2. Envisioning Lives at Ernabella
      Katrina Tjitayi and Sandra Lewis

      Chapter 3. Warungka: Becoming and Un-becoming a Warlpiri Person
      Yasmine Musharbash

      Chapter 4. Fathers and Sons, Trajectories of Self – Reflections on Pintupi Lives and Futures
      Fred R. Myers

      PART II: STORIES, LANGUAGE AND SOCIAL SPACE

      Chapter 5.Sand Storytelling – Its Social Meaning in Anangu Children’s Lives
      Ute Eickelkamp

      Chapter 6.Young Children's Social Meaning-Making in a New Mixed Language
      Carmel O'Shannessey

      Appendix

      Chapter 7.The Yard Craig
      San Roque

      PART III: YOUTH, IDENTITY AND SOCIAL TRANSFORMATION

      Chapter 8. Organization within Disorder – The Present and Future of Young People in the Ngaanyatjarra Lands
      David Brooks

      Chapter 9. Being Mardu: Change and Challenge for Some Western Desert Young People Today
      Myrna Tonkinson

      Chapter 10. Invisible and Visible Loyalties in Racialized Contexts: A Systemic Perspective on Aboriginal Youth
      Marika Moisseeff

      Appendix

      Notes on Contributors
      References
      Index

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