Arrernte Present, Arrernte Past
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Diane J. Austin-Broos
About this book
Employing ethnographic and archival research, Diane Austin-Broos traces the history of the Arrernte as they have transitioned from a society of hunter-gatherers to members of the Hermannsburg Mission community to their present, marginalized position in the modern Australian economy. While she concludes that these wrenching structural shifts led to the violence that now marks Arrernte communities, she also brings to light the powerful acts of imagination that have sustained a continuing sense of Arrernte identity.
Author / Editor information
Reviews
“Mobilizing key concepts in Heideggerean existentialism, Austin-Broos analyzes how colonial invasion grabbed and framed Arrernte lands and lives and how Arrernte imagined and made new futures of hope for themselves and their children. In the process Austin-Broos maps out new ways of understanding indigenous efforts to create, uphold, and extend their life-worlds in the context of an often violent and hostile nation.”
“The history of Australian indigenous policy making is punctuated by crises in which Australians ponder the difficult trade-off between respecting the indigenous entitlement to be different and honoring their citizens’ right to conditions of living that meet Australian standards. Published in such a moment of perplexity, after twenty years of research, Arrernte Present, Arrernte Past offers no easy formula for policy renewal. Rather, this book’s profound service is to remind us of the difficulty of plotting the trajectory of hunter-gatherer ‘modernity’. Immersing the reader in the evolving Arrernte imaginary, Austin-Broos evokes its tenacity and its fragility, its accommodation of Lutheran Christianity and its ambivalence towards governmentality. In Central Australia, as in so many zones of postcolonial adjustment, the order of kinship and the order of the market clash tectonically—a long, slow friction whose casualties include not only the Arrernte but also the moral confidence of their varied champions. In Austin-Broos’s deeply researched and felt ethno-history, the reader will find elements of tragedy, relieved by the author’s persistent confidence in the Arrernte imagination.”
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Part One: Remembering the Mission
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Part Two: Life as a Standing Fight
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Part Three: Outstations and Being Remote
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