Zobrazeno 1 - 10
of 37
pro vyhledávání: '"Linda Barwick"'
Publikováno v:
Australian Journal of Politics & History.
Publikováno v:
Preservation, Digital Technology & Culture. 50:99-104
Highlighting perspectives from First Nations peoples whose cultural heritage is held in archives of various types, this article sets the scene for this special edition on “Reclaiming Archives.” Emerging protocols for Indigenous community engageme
Publikováno v:
New Media & Society. 23:692-714
This article considers how Indigenous peoples in Central Australia share and keep digital records of events and cultural knowledge in a period of rapid technological change. To date, research has focused upon the development of digital archives and p
Autor:
Linda Barwick, Jakelin Troy
Publikováno v:
Musicology Australia. 42:85-107
This article aims to re-evaluate Johann Lhotsky’s published sheet music ‘A Song of the Women of the Menero Tribe near the Australian Alps’ to claim it as a distinctively Ngarigu document that speak...
Autor:
Clint Bracknell, Linda Barwick
Publikováno v:
Musicology Australia. 42:70-84
Publikováno v:
Journal of Ethnobiology. 39:354
Songs encode rich knowledge of the social and ecological worlds of Aboriginal people living in the arid interior of the Australian continent, a desert with one of the most variable rainfalls in the world. People have shaped the ecology of this region
Publikováno v:
Musicology Australia. 35:191-220
In 2010 the authors visited various Central Australian communities, including Willowra, Tennant Creek, Alekarenge, Barrow Creek and Ti Tree, to interview some of our research collaborators past and present about how they saw the present and future of
Autor:
Linda Barwick
Publikováno v:
Musicology Australia. 28:1-25
This essay discusses a set of lirrga songs performed for Allan Marett in I998 at Wadeye in Australia’s Northern Territory by a group of senior Marn Ngarr men comprising the singers and composers Pros Luckan and Clement Tchinburur, the ritual specia
Wangga, originating in the Daly region of Australia’s Top End, is one of the most prominent Indigenous genres of public dance-songs. This book focuses on the songmen who created and performed the songs for their own communities and for the general
Externí odkaz:
https://explore.openaire.eu/search/publication?articleId=doi_________::80d5ce503125c02860829123705a2b02
https://doi.org/10.30722/sup.9781920899752
https://doi.org/10.30722/sup.9781920899752