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Indigenous Studies

After the Elegy

by Inga Clendinnen
February 2005, no. 268

Going The Whiteman’s Way: Kinship And Marriage Among Australian Aborigines by David McKnight

Ashgate, £45hb, 284pp

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David McKnight made the first of many field trips to Mornington Island in 1966, when the old people could still remember how it was before the white men came. The Lardil largely escaped the violence that accompanied white intrusion, and had kept possession of their land, although in time they were made to share it with survivors from the region. A mission, established in 1914, had preserved them from further predation, but at a cost: hunter-gatherers were rounded up and made to live cheek-by-jowl in a ‘supercamp’ close by the mission, and their children were taken to be raised and educated by the missionaries, with only casual contact with their parents.

 


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Going The Whiteman’s Way: Kinship And Marriage Among Australian Aborigines by David McKnight

Ashgate, £45hb, 284pp

ABR receives a commission on items purchased through this link. All ABR reviews are fully independent.


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