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Beyond the Dreamtime: archaeology and explorations of religious change in Australia created by Peter Hiscock

By: Material type: TextTextSeries: ; Volume , number ,Taylor & Francis 2013Content type:
  • text
Media type:
  • unmediated
Carrier type:
  • volume
Subject(s): Online resources: Summary: Changes in mythology and ritual practice are studied in southern Australia. In the early nineteenth century a reworked set of myths that have incorporated Christian motifs was grafted onto a pre-existing system of axe production, revealing the malleability of cosmological notions and the persistence of the tool production system. Transformations of mythology are displayed archaeologically in the disjunction between archaeological evidence of late Holocene axe exchange and historical statements of Aboriginal cosmology in southern Australia. This is a specific test of the widely held proposition that Aboriginal religion was stable. A number of archaeological studies now show significant, sometimes repeated, change in cosmology during the last millennium. Such studies not only illustrate the impact of external culture contact as a force generating religious change but also raise the possibility that the rate and magnitude of cosmological change may be able to be measured in ancient Australia.
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Item type Current library Call number Vol info Copy number Status Notes Date due Barcode
Journal Article Journal Article Main Library - Special Collections CC1WOR (Browse shelf(Opens below)) Vol 45 .No.1 pages 124-136 SP18120 Not for loan For Inhouse use only

Changes in mythology and ritual practice are studied in southern Australia. In the early nineteenth century a reworked set of myths that have incorporated Christian motifs was grafted onto a pre-existing system of axe production, revealing the malleability of cosmological notions and the persistence of the tool production system. Transformations of mythology are displayed archaeologically in the disjunction between archaeological evidence of late Holocene axe exchange and historical statements of Aboriginal cosmology in southern Australia. This is a specific test of the widely held proposition that Aboriginal religion was stable. A number of archaeological studies now show significant, sometimes repeated, change in cosmology during the last millennium. Such studies not only illustrate the impact of external culture contact as a force generating religious change but also raise the possibility that the rate and magnitude of cosmological change may be able to be measured in ancient Australia.

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