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Aboriginal Rock Art and the Telling of History

Aboriginal Rock Art and the Telling of History

Aboriginal Rock Art and the Telling of History

Authors:
Laura Rademaker, Australian National University, Canberra
Sally K. May, University of Adelaide
Gabriel Maralngurra, Injalak Arts
Joakim Goldhahn, University of Adelaide
Published:
February 2025
Availability:
Available
Format:
Hardback
ISBN:
9781009523318

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$120.00
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Hardback
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    The rock art of Australia is among the oldest, most complex, and most fascinating manifestations of human creativity and imagination in the world. Aboriginal people used art to record their experiences, ceremonies, and knowledge by embedding their understanding of the world in the landscape over many generations. Indeed, rock art serves as archives and libraries for Australia's Indigenous people. It is, in effect, its repository of memory. This volume explores Indigenous perspectives on rock art. It challenges the limits and assumptions of traditional, academic ways of understanding and knowing the past by showing how history has literally been painted 'on the rocks'. Each chapter features a biography of an artist or family of artists, together with an artwork created by contemporary artist Gabriel Maralngurra. By bringing together history, archaeology, and Indigenous artistic practice, the book offers new insights into the medium of rock art and demonstrates the limits of academic methods and approaches.

    • Provides an interdisciplinary approach to the study of rock art
    • Uses accessible and non-technical language
    • Offers arguments from historians' perspectives

    Product details

    February 2025
    Hardback
    9781009523318
    204 pages
    236 × 158 × 15 mm
    0.46kg
    Available

    Table of Contents

    • List of figures
    • Foreword
    • Acknowledgements
    • Note on the text
    • List of abbreviations
    • 1. Rock beats paper: 'prehistory', rock art and archives
    • 2. Change and tradition in West Arnhem land rock art
    • 3. The counter-archive of First Nations biography
    • 4. Reading the writing on the wall: rock art and the written word
    • 5. Touchstones for memory, bedrocks for history
    • 6. Timelessness and permanence: rock art and time
    • Conclusions
    • Afterword
    • Glossary
    • Bibliography
    • Index.
      Authors
    • Laura Rademaker , Australian National University, Canberra

      Laura Rademaker is Australian Research Council DECRA Research Fellow at the Australian National University. A historian of Indigenous Australia, she is a winner of the Australian Historical Association's Hancock Prize and the Academy of Social Sciences in Australia's Paul Bourke Award for her interdisciplinary and community-based historical methods.

    • Sally K. May , University of Adelaide

      Sally K. May is Associate Professor and ARC Future Fellow in the School of Humanities, University of Adelaide. Her research, which is based on more than twenty years of fieldwork in northern Australia, focuses on relationships between people, landscapes, material culture, and imagery.

    • Gabriel Maralngurra , Injalak Arts

      Gabriel Maralngurra is a renowned Australian Indigenous artist. He also works as a translator, artistic mentor, tour guide, and co-researcher in Aboriginal and colonial history and art from western Arnhem Land.  He is one of the founding members of Injalak Arts and is currently its co-manager.

    • Joakim Goldhahn , University of Adelaide

      Joakim Goldhahn, author of Birds in the Bronze Age, is an internationally acclaimed rock art researcher who also works in the fields of Indigenous Archaeology and the European Bronze Age.