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Full Description
In February 1948, a team of Australians and Americans embarked upon one of the largest scientific expeditions that had ever taken place in Australia. Seventeen men and women journeyed across northern Australia for nine months, investigating the people and environment of the remote region known as Arnhem Land. Today, the Arnhem Land Expedition remains one of the most significant, most ambitious, and least understood expeditions ever mounted. Collecting Cultures draws together diverse strands of evidence to investigate the events and consequences of the 1948 Arnhem Land Expedition. In the wake of the expedition came volumes of scientific publications, kilometers of film, thousands of photographs, tens of thousands of scientific specimens, and a vast array of artifacts and artwork from across Arnhem Land. Collecting Cultures explores the complex and, at times, contentious legacy of this ethnographic fieldwork and artifact collection, revealing how the cross-cultural encounters transformed and continue to transform our understanding of people and places.
Contents
Chapter 1 Preface Chapter 2 Chapter 1. Beginnings Chapter 3 Chapter 2. Collecting Colonial Ethnography Chapter 4 Chapter 3. Preparing for Arnhem Land Chapter 5 Chapter 4. Exploring the Great Unknown - Groote Eylandt Chapter 6 Chapter 5. Exploring the Great Unknown - Yirrkala Chapter 7 Chapter 6. Exploring the Great Unknown - Oenpelli Chapter 8 Chapter 7. Collecting Arnhem Land Chapter 9 Chapter 8. When We Have Put to Sea Chapter 10 Chapter 9. Reflections on an Ethnographic Collection Chapter 11 Chapter 10. A Series Most Promising Chapter 12 Chapter 11. The Ongoing Impact Chapter 13 References