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Books, Papers & Recordings
| Anon. 1967 Nicholson patrol-1943. Citation: The Northern Territory Police Magazine, June: 12-13. Anon. 1967. Borroloola again. Citation: The Northern Territory Police Magazine, June: 36. Attenborough, D. 1963. Quest Under Capricorn. London: Lutterworth Press,. Australian Aboriginal Lands Commissioner, 1977. Borroloola Land Claim: Transcripts of proceedings before His Honour Mr Justice Toohey, Aboriginal Lands Commissioner. 27.9.77 - 15.12.77. 5 volumes. Avery, John and Dehne McLaughlin. 1977. Submission by Northern Land Council to Aboriginal Land Commissioner on Behalf of Traditional Land Owners in Borroloola Region of the Northern Territory. Darwin: Northern Land Council. Avery, John T. 1978. "Aboriginal Land Rights - The View from Borroloola." National Times, July 22. _____1982. Two laws. Cinema Papers. August: 328, 329, 395. _____. 1983. "The recent history of the Borroloola Aboriginal people and their struggle for land rights." We are Bosses Ourselves: the Status and Role of Aboriginal Women Today. Fay Gale, ed. Canberra: Australian Institute of Aboriginal Studies. 62-65. _____. 1985. The Law People: History, Society and Initiation in the Borroloola Area of the Northern Territory. Ph.D. thesis, University of Sydney. Baker, R.M. 1984. Macassan Site Survey: Report to the Northern Territory Museum and the Australian Heritage Commission. Unpublished report, copies are held by the NT Museum, Darwin and the Australian Heritage Commission, Canberra. _____ 1988. Yanyuwa canoe making. Records of the South Australian Museum, 22(2): 173-188. _____1989. Land is Life: Continuity through Change for the Yanyuwa from the Northern Territory of Australia. Ph.D. thesis, University of Adelaide. _____ 1989, Yanyuwa Contact History: The Value of Oral Sources. Oral History Association of Australia Journal 11: 30-41. _____ 1990 "Coming in: Yanyuwa Contact History. Aboriginal History 14 (1-2) (1990): 25-60. _____ 1990 "The impact of tourism on the Aboriginal community of the Borroloola area of the Northern Territory." Paper presented to the Australian Institute of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Studies Remote Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Community Futures Conference, Townsville July 12. _____1992 "Gough Whitlam time": Land rights in the Borroloola area of Australia's Northern Territory, Applied Geography. 12: 162-175. Also published in Indigenous Land Rights in Commonwealth Countries, Dispossession, negotiation and community action. Proceedings of a Commonwealth Geographic Bureau Workshop, Christchurch February 1992, Department of Geography, Christchurch. _____ 1993 Traditional Aboriginal land use p126-143 in Traditional Ecological knowledge: wisdom for sustainable knowledge edited by Nancy Williams and Graham Baines Centre for Resource and Environmental Management, Australian National University, Canberra. _____ 1996.Coming In: The Yanyuwa as a case study in the geography of contact history, 123-166, in Chapman, V and Read, P. eds Terrible Hard Biscuits, Allen & Unwin, Sydney. _____1999 Aboriginal Cultural Landscapes, chapter in Elaine Stratford, Australian Cultural Geographies, Oxford University Press, Geography Meridian series. _____1999. Land Is Life: From Bush To Town - The Story of the Yanyuwa People, Allen & Unwin, Sydney. _____1999 Aboriginal Cultural Landscapes, chapter in Elaine Stratford, Australian Cultural Geographies, Oxford University Press, Geography Meridian series. Baker, Richard
, Jocelyn Davies and Elspeth Young (eds.) 2001 Working on Country:
Contemporary Indigenous Management of Australia's Lands and Coastal
Regions , Oxford University Press, Melbourne. Barfield, E.J. 1918. Tropic Days . T. Fisher Unwin, London. Barker, R.M. 1966. Droving Days. Pitman, Melbourne. Barwick, Linda M. 1997. "Gender 'Taboos' and Didjeridus." The Didjeridu: From Arnhem Land to Internet. Karl Neuenfeldt, ed. Sydney: John Libbey & Company Pty Ltd. 89-98. Bauer, F.L. 1959. Historical Geographic Survey of Part of Northern Australia. Part I. Introduction and the eastern Gulf region. CSIRO Division of Land Research and Regional Survey Division. Report No 59/2 Roneoed, Canberra, December 1959. Bauer, F.W. 1964. Historical Geography of White Settlement in Part of Northern Australia. Part 2. The Katherine-Darwin region . CSIRO Division of Land Research and Regional Survey, No 64/1, CSIRO, Canberra. Bell, A. 1988. Watch out for the 'morning glory'. Ecos, 56, Winter: 28-30. Bell, Diane. 1994. "In the Tracks of the Munga-Munga." Claiming Our Rites. Studies in Religion by Australian Women Scholars. Morny Joy and Penelope Magee, eds. Adelaide: The Australian Association for the Study of Religions. 213-246. Berndt, Ronald M. 1955. Kunapipi. A Study of an Australian Aboriginal Religious Cult. New York: International Universities Press. Birt, G. 1968. Homicide at Borroloola. The Territorian. (Printed and Published by Northern Territory News Service Limited). Darwin. April: 13-19. Bleakley, J.W. 1929. The Aboriginals and half castes of Central Australia and North Australia: Report by J.W. Bleakley, Chief Protector of Aborigines, Queensland, 1928. Commonwealth Parliamentary Papers 1929. Vol II: 1159-1225. Bleakley, J.W. 1961. The Aborigines of Australia: Their history, their habits, their assimilation. Brisbane: Jacaranda Press. Bradley, J. 1984. Kujika. Unpublished Manuscript, held by Author. _____1988. Yanyuwa Country: The Yanyuwa people of Borroloola tell the history of their land. Translated and illustrated by J. Bradley. Melbourne: Greenhouse Publications. _____1988 The Concurrence of Knowledge and Tradition in the Hunting of Dugongs and Sea Turtles in the Sir Edward Pellew Islands in Gray, F. and Zann, L. (editors), Traditional Knowledge of the Marine Environment in Northern Australia: Proceedings of a workshop held in Townsville, Australia, 29 and 30 July 1985. Great Barrier Reef Marine Park Authority, Townsville, pp.99-115. _____1988. "Yanyuwa: 'Men speak one way, women speak another'." Aboriginal Linguistics 1: 126-134. _____. 1988. Yanyuwa Country. The Yanyuwa People of Borroloola tell the History of their Land. Richmond: Greenhouse Publications. ______.. 1989 “What would a whitefella know…?” Wester Science-Indigenous Science and Marine Science In R.Kennet (ed) Marine Turtle Conservation and Management in Northern Australia. Proceedings of a workshop held at the Northern Territory University Darwin, 3-4 June 1997, Northern Territory University. Pp25-33 _____. 1990. Ka-wayawayama. The Aeroplane Dance. Motion Picture. Sydney: Film Australia in conjunction with SBS Television. _____. 1991 Yanyuwa Bark Canoes. The Great Circle, Journal of the Australian Association for Maritime History. Vol 13, No2 pp85-92 _____. 1991 “Li-Maramaranja” The Yanyuwa Hunters of Marine Animals in the Sir Edward Pellew Group. N.T. Records of the South Australian Museum 25(2) Adelaide. S.A pp91-110 _____. 1992. Warnarrwarnarr-Barranyi (Borroloola 2) Land Claim. Anthropologist Report on Behalf of the Claimants. Casuarina: Northern Land Council. _____. 1992. With Jean Kirton and the Yanyuwa community. Yanyuwa Wuka. Language from Yanyuwa Country. A Yanyuwa Dictionary and Cultural Resource. Unpublished document. _____. 1994 “Some Yanyuwa Songs” in Martin Duwell and R.M.W Dixon (eds) Little Eva at Moonlight Creek and other Aboriginal Song poems. Univeristy of Queensland Press, St. Lucia Queensland.pp 3-67 _____.. 1992 Warnarrwarnarr-Barranyi (Borroloola 2) Land Claim. Anthropologists report on behalf of the claimants. Northern Land Council, Darwin (note this volume is fully refereed by two senior academic anthropologists) _____. 1994. "Some Yanyuwa Songs." Little Eva at Moonlight Creek and Other Aboriginal Song Poems. Martin Duwell and Robert M. W. Dixon, eds. St.Lucia: University of Queensland Press. 3-67. _____. 1995 “Fire: Emotion and Politics: A Yanyuwa Case Study. In D.Rose (ed) Country in Flames: Proceedings of the 1994 symposium on biodiversity and fire in North Australia. Biodiversity Unit, department of the Environment, Sports and Territories and the North Australia Research Unit, Canberra and Darwin. Pp25-33 _____.1996 Discovering and Recovering Australia. Generation. Australian Jewish Life and Thought. Vol. 6 No.1&2.pp1-3 _____. 1997. Li-anthawirriyarra, People of the Sea: Yanyuwa Relations with their Maritime Environment. Ph. D thesis, Northern Territory University. Bradley,J., R.Harvey and D. Norman 1997 “Burning for the ancestors, burning for us” A case study from the southwest Gulf of Carpentaria In B.Mckaige, R.Willimas and W.Waggit (eds) Bushfire ’97 Proceedings. Australia Bushfire Conference 8-10 July 1997. CSIRO Tropical Ecosystems Research Centre. Darwin pp75-80 Bradley, J. 1997 “We don’t burn for fun”. Some views on Indigenous burning in Northern Australia. Greening News. Greening Australia NT. Newsletter May/June/July/ Bradley, J.1998 “We always look north”. Yanyuwa Marine Tenure. In Nicholas Peterson and Bruce Rigsby (eds) Customary Marine Tenure. Oceania Monograph University of Sydney pp125-141 Bradley, J.1998 “Men Speak One Way,Women Another in Jenny Coats (ed) Language and Gender: A Reader. Roehampton Institute. Blackwells. London pp.26-35Bradley, J Bradley, J., F. Devlin-Glass and E.Mackinlay 1999 Diwurruwurru: Towards a New Kind of Two Way Class Room in The Australian Journal of Indigenous Education. University of Queensland Vol 27. N0.2 pp24-26 Bradley,J. 2000 Country of Our Spirit. Yanyuwa land and sea scapes in Michael Crozier (ed) Gardens and landscapes, SAQ South Atlantic Quarterly. Duke University Press, Durham, North Carolina pp801-816 Bradley, J. 2000 Lhukannguwarra. A claim to the intertidal zone from the Robinson River Mouth to Bing Bong Creek Mouth, Including the beds and banks of the McArthur River to King Ash Bay, Crooked River and Carrington Channel. Northern Land Council, Darwin. (note this volume is fully refereed by two senior academic anthropologists) ______. 2000 Songs from a plastic water rat: An Introduction to the musical traditions of the Yanyuwa community of the South West Gulf of Carpentaria. N.T. Ngulaig Journal. University of Queensland. ______.. 2001 Landscapes of the Mind, Landscapes of the Spirit. In R.Baker, J. Davies and E. Young (eds) Working on Country: Contemporary Indigenous Management on Australia’s Lands and Coastal Regions. South Melbourne: Oxford University Press. Pp.295-304 Bradley, J. and E.Mackinlay 2003 Of mermaids and Spirit Men: Complexities in Categorisation of Two Aboriginal Dance Performances at Borroloola. N.T The Asian Pacific Journal of Anthropology 4 (1) pp1-23 Bradley, J., Yanyuwa families and Nona Cameron 2003 “Forget About Flinders” An Indigenous Atlas of the Southwest Gulf of Carpentaria. J.M McGregor Ltd Queensland (Limited Edition) Bradley,J. and E.Mackinlay 2003 Many Songs, Many Voices, Many Dialogues: Yanyuwa performance practices in a remote Aboriginal Community. Rural Society. Vol 14. No2 pp228-243 Bradley, J and K.Seton 2004 “When you have no Law you are nothing” Cane Toads, Social Consequences and Management Issues. The Asia Pacific Journal of Anthropology. 5:3 pp205-225 Bradley, J. 2004 Kidnapped Back Home in Hilda Muir, Very Big Journey: My life as I remember it. Aboriginal Studies Press. Canberra pp.140-153 Bradley, J., Holmes,
M.,Norman, D., Isaac, A., Miller, J. and Ninganga, I 2005 Yumbulyumbulmantha
ki-awarawu (All kinds of things from Country) Yanyuwa Ethnobiological
Classification, Ngulaig. Monograph series of the Aboriginal and
Torres Strait Islander Unit University of Queensland Brandenstein, Carl. 1982. Names and Substance of the Australian Subsection System. Chicago: University of Chicago Press. Brock, J. 1988. Top End Native Plants. Darwin: John Brock. Brown, H.Y.L. 1908. Report on Geological Reconnaissance of the Eastern Coast from Van Dieman Gulf to the McArthur River, etc., made by the government geologist in 1907. Adelaide: S.A. Government Printer. Bureau of Meteorology. 1984. Report on Cyclone Kathy, March 1984. Bureau of Meteorology, Canberra: Australian Government Publishing Service. Burgoyne, P. 1978. Borroloola land claim. Chain Reaction, 4: 21-24. Capell, A. 1963. Linguistic Survey of Australia. Report prepared for the Australian Institute of Aboriginal Studies, Canberra. Carment, David. 1987. "The Heritage of Borroloola." Heritage Australia 6(3): 17-18. Cavadini. A, C. Strachan, C. Merewether, and L. Stern. 1981. "Two Laws: Kanymarda yuwa." Media Interventions: 63-77. Devlin-Glass, Frances.2002. ‘Postcolonial Imperatives in Representing the Indigenous Sacred: A Yanyuwa Case-Study’ in Colette Rayment and Mark Levon Byrne (eds.), Seeking the Centre: 2001 Australian International Religion, Literature and the Arts Conference Proceedings, RLA Press, Sydney, 2002, pp.277-92. _________2002.‘Reviving Cultures: Irish Culture in the Nineteenth Century and Aboriginal Culture in Cyberspace in the early Twenty-First Century.’ in Shirley Walker and Ken Stewart (eds.), Essays On Australian Literature To 2002 For Julian Croft, Eds. Ken Stewart and Shirley Walker. The Centre For Australian Studies (Calls), The University Of New England, Armidale, 2002, pp.18-34. _______ 2002, ‘The Politics of the Sacred in Cyber Country: Deconstructing the ‘Primitive’, Antipodes , Dec. 2002, pp. 145-50. Dartnell, J. 1983. Borroloola, the Carnegie Library that wasn't. Riverina Library File , 4(2) Winter 1983: 19-23. Duncan, R. 1967. The Northern Territory Pastoral Industry 1863-1910. Melbourne: Melbourne University Press. Duwell, Martin and Robert M. W. Dixon, eds. 1994. Little Eva at Moonlight Creek and Other Aboriginal Song Poems. St. Lucia: Queensland University Press. Dymock, J. 1982. Historical Material Relevant to Nicholson River Claim Area . Northern Land Council, Darwin. Elkin, A.P. 1947. Aboriginal evidence and justice in North Australia. Oceania, 17(3): 173-210. Farwell, G. 1962. Cape York to the Kimberleys. Adelaide: Rigby. Farwell, G. 1975. Ghost Towns of Australia. Adelaide: Rigby. Favenc, E. and Crawford, L. 1884. General report on country in the Northern Territory by E. Favenc, and report of country on the Macarthur River, Northern Territory, by E. Favenc and L. Crawford. South Australian Parliamentary Proceedings , 4 (181) of 1883/4. Field, M and Main, C. 1960. Encouraging news from Borroloola. Our Aim, April: 18. Finlay, Betty. 1982. "We Aboriginal People never had a Boss." Aboriginal Islander Message 31, March-April, 7-8. Finlay, Leo. 1976. "The Aboriginal View of Land Rights at Borroloola." Land Rights News 3:9-12. Flinders, J. 1814. A Voyage to Terra Australis, Undertaken for the purpose of completing the discovery of that vast country, and prosecuted in the years 1802, 1802 and 1803 in His Majesty's Ship the Investigator etc. London: G. and W. Nicol. Fuller, F.C. 1978. Journeys to Borroloola: a contrast. The Melbourne Walker 49: 59-64. Fullwood, B. 1986. Down to the sea. Trust News. National Trust of Australia (Northern Territory) Newsletter - Darwin, 3(1) February. Furby, E.S. and Furby, C.E. 1977. A Preliminary Analysis of Garawa Phrases and Clauses. Canberra: Department of Linguistics, Research School of Pacific Studies, Australian National University. Gale, F. (ed.) 1978. Women's Role in Aboriginal Society . (3rd Edition.) Canberra: Australian Institute of Aboriginal Studies. Gale, Fay. 1983. We are Bosses Ourselves: the Status and Role of Aboriginal Women Today. Canberrra: Australian Institute of Aboriginal Studies. Gale, Mary-Anne 1997. Dhanum Djorra'wuy Dhawu: A History of Writing in Aboriginal Languages. Aboriginal Research Institute, South Australia. Gillen, Frank G. 1968. Gillen's Diary. The Camp Jottings of F.J. Gillen on the Spencer and Gillen Expedition across Australia 1901-1902. Adelaide: Libraries Board of South Australia. Graber, P.L. 1987. Kriol in the Barkly Tableland. Australian Aboriginal Studies, 1987(2): 14-19. Gray, Peter (Justice) 1997, Warnarrwarnarr-Barranyi Borroloola No.2 Land Claim No. 30. Canberra: Australian Government Publishing Service. Gregory, A.C. 1861. North Australian expedition. South Australian Parliamentary Papers, 1861: No 170. Griffin, E.J. 1941. Camping with the Yanular blacks. Walkabout, 7: 29-32. Hale, Kenneth. 1959. Yanyuwa Field Notes. Canberra: Australian Institute of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Studies. Hall, R.A. 1980. Aborigines and the Army. Defence Force Journal, September/October, 1980: 28-41. Hall, R.A. 1980. Aborigines, the Army and the Second World War in Northern Australia. Aboriginal History, 4: 73-95. Harney, W.E. 1946. North of 23°: Ramblings in Northern Australia. Sydney: Australasian Publishing Company. Harney, W.E. 1947. Brimming Billabongs. Sydney: Angus and Robertson. Harney, W.E. 1957. Life Among the Aborigines. Adelaide: Rigby. Harvey, A. 1945. Primitive Economics: Food Preservation in Australian Tribes. Mankind, 5(7): 191-192. Heath, J. 1980. Nungubuyu Myths and Ethnographic Texts . Canberra: Australian Institute of Aboriginal Studies. Heath, J. 1981. Basic Materials in Mara: Grammar, texts and dictionary. Canberra: Department of Linguistics, Research School of Pacific Studies, Australian National University. Heeres, J.E. 1899. The Part Borne by the Dutch in the Discovery of Australia 1606-1765. London: Luzach and Co. Hill, E. 1945. Wings to Borroloola. Walkabout, October, 11(12): 7-10. Hill, E. 1948. The Great Australian Loneliness. Melbourne: Robertson and Mullens Limited Hill, E. 1951. The Territory. Sydney: Angus and Robertson. Holmes, J.H. 1986 The Pastoral Lands of the Northern Territory Gulf District: Resource appraisal and land use options. Unpublished report to the Northern Territory Department of Lands, copy obtained from author, Professor of Geography, University of Queensland. Holmes, J.H. 1988. Remote settlements. Pages 68-84 in Heathcote, R.L. (editor), The Australian Experience: Essays in Australian Land Settlement and Resource Management. Melbourne: Longman. Holmes, J.M. 1963. Australia's Open North: A study of northern Australia bearing on the urgency of the times . Sydney: Angus and Robertson. Hornell, J. 1942. The Genetic Relation of the Bark Canoe to Dug-outs and Plank-built Boats. Man, 40: 114-119. Johnson, J. 1966. Bush stations - a wife's view. Citation: The Northern Territory Police Magazine, December: 27-30. Kettle, E. 1967. Gone Bush. Sydney: F.P. Leonard. Kirton, Jean F. 1964. "Anyula Personal Pronouns." Papers on the Languages of the Australian Aborigines. R. Pittman and H. Kerr, eds. Canberra: Australian Institute of Aboriginal Studies. 139-166. _____.1967. Anyula phonology. Pacific Linguistics, Series A, 10: 15-28. _____.1971. Complexities of Yanyula nouns. Inter-relationship of linguistics and anthropology. Papers on Australian Linguistics , 5: 15-70. _____. 1976. "Yanyuwa Nominative and Ergative-allative Cases." Pacific Linguistics 47: 1-12. _____.1978. Yanyuwa verbs. Pacific Linguistics, Series A, 51: 1-52. _____.1987. "Yanyuwa - A Dying Language." Working papers of Summer Institute of Linguistics AA Series. Series B, Volume 13. Darwin: Summer Institute of Linguistics. _____. 1988. "Men's and Women's dialects." Aboriginal Linguistics 1: 111-125. Kirton, J.F. and Charlie, B. 1978. Seven articulatory positions in Yanyuwa consonants. Pacific Linguistics , Series A, 51: 79-99. Kirton, Jean and Nero Timothy. 1977. "Yanyuwa concepts relating to "skin"," Oceania 47(2): 320-322. _____1982. "Some thoughts on Yanyuwa Language and Culture." Working papers of Summer Institute of Linguistics Australian Aborigines Branch. Series B, Volume 8. Darwin: Summer Institute of Linguistics. Leichhardt, L. 1847. Journal of an Overland Expedition in Australia from Moreton Bay to Port Essington, a distance of upwards of 3000 miles, during the years 1844-1845. London: T. and W. Boone. Republished in Australiana Facsimile Editions No 16. Libraries Board of South Australia 1964. Leyland, M. and Leyland, M. 1969. Untamed Coast . Melbourne: Lansdowne Press Pty. Ltd. Lockwood, D. 1964. Up the Track. Rigby, Adelaide. Mackinlay, Elizabeth 1994. "Music of Oceania". World Music. Cultural Traditions. Bob Haddad, ed. New York: Glencoe. 85-92. _____1995 "Review - Goyulan: The Morning Star". Ethnomusicology 38(3)._____1995 "Im Been Dance La Me!: Yanyuwa Women's Song Creation of the Northern Territory". Australian Womens Composing Festival. Sydney: Australian Music Centre. _____1997 " 'Men Don't Talk Much Anymore': The Changing Status of Women in Society and Possible Implications For Yanyuwa Women as Keepers, Composers and Performers of A-Nguyulnguyul." Context 12: 45-50. _____1997 "Review The Didjeridu: From Arnhem Land to Internet". Australian Journal of Indigenous Education 25(2): 50-51. _____1998 For Our Mothers Song We Sing: Yanyuwa Women Performers and Composers of A-nguyulnguyul. Ph.D thesis, University of Adelaide. _____1998 "Towards Reconciliation: Teaching Gender and Music in the Context of Indigenous Australian Womens Performance". Australian Journal of Indigenous Education 26(2): 18-27 ._____1998 "Traditional Australian Music Gulf of Carpentaria". Garland Encyclopedia of World Music. Australia and the Pacific Islands. Volume 9. Adrienne Kaeppler and Jacob W. Love, eds. New York: Garland Publishing, Inc. 427-428. _____2000 "Music for dreaming: Aboriginal Lullabies in the Yanyuwa community at Borroloola, Northern Territory". British Journal of Ethnomusicology Vol 8.: 97-111. Mackinlay, E. 2000. Maintaining grandmothers' law: Female song partners in Yanyuwa culture. Musicology Australia 23, 76-98. Bradley,
J., & Mackinlay, E. 2000. Songs from a plastic water rat:
An
Mackinlay, E. 2001. Setting the stage: Learning Indigenous women's music and dance in an Australian educational institution. In H.R. Lawrence & D. Niles (Eds.), Traditionalism and modernity in the music and dance of Oceania: Essays in honour of Barbara B. Smith. Oceania Monograph 52. Sydney: Oceania Publications, University of Sydney. Mackinlay, E. 2001. Performative pedagogy in teaching and learning Indigenous women's music and dance. Australian Journal of Indigenous Education 29, 1, 12-21. Mackinlay, E. 2002. Engaging with theories of dialogue and voice: Using Bakhtin as a framework to understand teaching and learning Indigenous Australian womenâs performance. Research Studies in Music Education 19, 32-45. Mackinlay, E. 2002. Memories in the landscape: The role of performance in naming, knowing and claiming Yanyuwa Country. In R. Nile (Ed.), Terra-Re-cognition: New essays in Australian Studies. St Lucia: University of Queensland Press. Mackinlay, E. 2003. Women play too: Didjeridu performance at Borroloola, NT. Women and Music, 7, 1-11. Mackinlay, E. 2003. Embodied pedagogy: Reading race and gender in an Indigenous Australian women’s music and dance classroom. Gender, Education, Music and Society, 3, http://www/boisestate.edu/gems/pedagogical¬_spotlights.htm.Mackinlay, E. 2003. Performing race, culture, and gender in an Indigenous Australian women’s music and dance classroom. Communication and Education, 52(3/4), 258-272. Mackinlay, E. & Dunbar-Hall, P. 2003. Historical and dialectical perspectives of the teaching of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander musics in the Australian education system. The Australian Journal of Indigenous Education, 32. Mackinlay, E. & Bradley, J. 2003. Many songs, many voice and many dialogues: A conversation about Yanyuwa performance practice in a remote Aboriginal community. Rural Society 13, 3, 228-243. Mackinlay, E. & Bradley, J. 2003. Of mermaids and spirit men: Complexities in the categorisation of two Aboriginal dance performances at Borroloola, NT. The Australian Pacific Journal of Anthropology, 4(1/2), 2-24.
Mackinlay, E. 2004 (Submitted). “For our mother’s song we sing”: Yanyuwa Aboriginal women’s narratives of experience, memory and emotion. Special issue of Altitude, http://www.api-network.com/altitude/. Mackinlay,
E., & Baker, F. 2004. Nurturing herself, nurturing her baby: Creating
positive experiences for first time mothers through lullaby singing.
Women and Music, 9. Mackinlay, E., Thatcher, K., & Seldon, C. 2004. Understanding social and legal justice issues for Aboriginal women within the context of an Indigenous Australian studies classroom: A problem based learning approach.Australian Journal of Indigenous Education, 33.
Mackinlay, E., S. Owens & D. Collins (Eds.). 2005 (In press). Aesthetics and experience in music performance. Cambridge: Cambridge Scholars Press. Mackinlay, E. 2005 (In press). Making the journey in: Indigenous women’s performance traditions in tertiary classrooms. In K. Neuenfeldt & F. Magowan (Eds.), Indigenous music from tropical Australia: Case studies from Torres Strait and Arnhem Land. Canberra: Aboriginal Studies Press. Mackinlay, E. 2005 (In press). Yanyuwa women’s performance practice at Borroloola: Reflections from the field. In E. Mackinlay, S. Owens & D. Collins (Eds.), Aesthetics and experience in music performance. Cambridge: Cambridge Scholars Press.
Macknight, C.C. 1969. The Macassans: A study of the early trepang industry along the Northern Territory coast. PhD Thesis, Australian National University, Canberra. Macknight, C.C. 1972. Macassans and Aborigines. Oceania , 42: 283-321. _____ 1976. The voyage to Marege: Macassan trepangers in Northern Australia. Melbourne: Melbourne University Press. McDinny, Eileen and Annie Isaac. 1983. "Borroloola Community and Land Rights." We are Bosses Ourselves: the Status and Role of Aboriginal Women Today. Fay Gale, ed. Canberrra: Australian Institute of Aboriginal Studies. 66-67. McDinny, Eileen Manankurrmara. 1983. "Borroloola Women Speak. Man and Woman Dance Now." We are Bosses Ourselves: the Status and Role of Aboriginal Women Today. Fay Gale, ed. Canberrra: Australian Institute of Aboriginal Studies. 68-77. McKay, Graham 1996, The Land Still Speaks: Review of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Language Maintenance and Development Needs and Activities, Report commissioned by National Board of Employment, Education and Training, Canberra: Australian Government Publishing Service. McLaughlin, Dehne. 1977. "The Borroloola Story." Land Rights News 15:2-8. Palmer, K. 1985. Aborigines and Tourism, a study of the impact of tourism on Aborigines in the Northern Territory . Unpublished typescript, Northern Land Council, Darwin. Copy held by Australian Institute of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Studies, Canberra. Pannell, Kerr, Forster, 1988] Gulf Region Tourism Development Opportunity Study: Executive summary. Summary of report prepared by Pannel, Kerr, Forster: Management Consultants, June 1988. Paradice, W.E.J. 1923-24. A Report of the Sir Edward Pellew Group, with special reference to biology and physical features, to the Parliament of the Commonwealth of Australia. Commonwealth Parliamentary Papers, 1923-24 No 143. Government Printer of Victoria. Pattemore, L. 1953. Arriving at Borraloola (sic). Our Aim, 17 July 1953: 6. Pattemore, L. and Pattemore, M. 1954. Some facts about Borroloola in the Northern Territory. Our Aim, 17 April 1954: 14. _____1954. Commencing a school at Borroloola. Our Aim, 17 April 1954: 14. _____1955. Sickness and death at Borroloola. Our Aim, 17 March 1955: 8. _____1961. Borroloola. Our Aim, April 1961: 14.
Reay, M. 1963. Subsections at Borroloola. Oceania, 33: 90-115. _____ 1963 The social position of women. Australian Aboriginal Studies. H. Shiels, ed. Melbourne: Melbourne University Press (For the Australian Institute of Aboriginal Studies). 319-334. _____ 1970. A decision as narrative. In Berndt, R.M. (editor), Australian Aboriginal Anthropology: Modern studies in the social anthropology of the Australian Aborigines . Nedlands: University of Western Australia Press, 164-173. _____ 1979. A.P. Elkin 1891-1979: a personal memoir. Aboriginal History, 3: 88-90. _____1962. Subsections at Borroloola. Oceania: 91-115. Roberts, Tony. 2005. Frontier Justice: A History of the Gulf Country to 1900. University of Queensland Press, St. Lucia.
Sargeant, I.J. (editor) n.d. Environmental Report No. 8. McArthur River Catchment. N.T. Melbourne: Monash University Graduate School of Environmental Science. Searcy, A. 1907. In Australian Tropics. Kegan Paul, Trench, Truber, London. _____1911. By Flood and Field: adventures ashore and afloat in north Australia. Melbourne: George Robertson and Co. Sharp, Nonie 1996: No Ordinary Judgment: Mabo, the Murray Islanders' Land Case. Canberra, A.C.T.: Aboriginal Studies Press. Spencer, B. 1901. Diary 1901 . Titled S and G 2 1901 No. 4 held by National Museum of Victoria. _____1927. Wanderings in Wild Australia. (2 vols.), MacMillan, London. Spencer, Baldwin and Gillen, Frank J. 1904. Northern Tribes of Central Australia. London: Macmillan. _____1912. Across Australia . London: Macmillan. Stevens, F.S. 1974. Aborigines in the Northern Territory Cattle Industry. Canberra: Australian National University Press. Strehlow, T.G.H. 1971. Songs of Central Australia. Sydney: Angus and Robertson. Stretton, D. and Stretton, R. 1964. Borroloola, NT. Evangel, The Journal of the Australian Inland Mission, formerly Our Aim : October 1964. Stretton, W.G. 1893. Customs, rites and superstitions of the aboriginal tribes of the Gulf of Carpentaria. Journal Royal Geographic Society of Australia, South Australian Branch, 17: 227-253. Summer Institute of Linguistics, 1984. Draft Yanyuwa Dictionary. Unpublished. Note: Copy obtainable from their Darwin headquarters. Thom, D.E. 1984. The Australian tropical cyclone season 1983-84. Australian Meteorological Magazine, 32(3): 137-153. Tindale, N.B. 1940. Distribution of Australian Aboriginal tribes: a field survey. Transactions of the Royal Society of South Australia, 64(1): 140-231 and map, superseded by Tindale, 1974. Tindale, Norman B. 1974. Aboriginal Tribes of Australia. Their Terrain, Environmental Controls, Distribution, Limits and Proper Names. Canberra: Australian National University Press. Toohey, J. 1978. Borroloola Land Claim No.1: Report to the Minister of Aboriginal Affairs and to the Minister for the Northern Territory. Canberra: Australian Government Printing Service. Trigger, D.S. 1985. Doomadgee: A study of power relations and social action in a northern Australian Aboriginal settlement. PhD Thesis, Department of Anthropology and Sociology, University of Queensland, St Lucia. Trigger, D.S. 1987. Inland, coast and islands: traditional Aboriginal society and material culture in a region of the southern Gulf of Carpentaria. Records of the South Australian Museum, 21(2): 69-84. West, Lamont with Yanyula men and women. 1962. Tatypi-Tatypi Langgur corroboree. Beswick Creek, Northern Territory. Whitaker, Judy A. 1985. Borroloola: Isolated and Interesting. Darwin: Private Publication. Wildley, W.B. 1876. Australasia and the Oceania Region. Sydney: Robertson.
Sound Recordings Note: Unless otherwise noted, recordings are held by the interviewer. Bowden, Ros 1991. The Strangers Came with Canoes, First in a 6-programme series on 2 cassettes, Maritime Australia, 1991, made by Ros Bowden for the Australian National Maritime Museum, ABC audiocassette. Features the voices of Annie Karrakayn, Richard Baker, John Bradley, Steve Johnson, Laura Brown. Belfrage, Hugh with Yanyuwa women. 1992. Yanyuwa Song. Field recording. Borroloola, Northern Territory. Belfrage, Hugh. 1991. Transcriptions and Translations of some field tapes plus elicited material, plus some reworked untranslated texts. Canberra: Australian Institute of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Studies. Bradley, John1988. Field transcriptions of Yanyuwa texts and tapes of these texts. Deposit with Australian Institute of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Studies, Canberra, ACT; field dates 1998-1992. Bradley, John with Annie Isaac and Nora Jalirduma. 1990. Assorted Yanyuwa Sea Songs. Field recording. Borroloola, Northern Territory. Bradley, John with Jerry Brown. 1989. Path of the Wuyaliya Song Cycle. Field recording. Borroloola, Northern Territory. Bradley, John with Johnson Timothy. 1989. Path of Song Cycle from Vanderlin Rocks to Cape Vanderlin. Field recording. Borroloola, Northern Territory. Bradley, John with Ron Rickett. 1989. Path of the Rrumburriya Song Cycle. Field recording. Borroloola, Northern Territory. Bradley, John with Yanyuwa women. 1986. Yanyuwa Song. Field recording. Borroloola, Northern Territory. Dixon, Robert M. W. with Jerry Walden. 1963-64. Burketown Songs and Music. Field recording. Upper Murray, Queensland. Leeden, Alex C. van der with Nunggubuju, Mara and Janjula men. 1964. Esoteric Gunabibi Singing. Field recording. Rose River, Northern Territory. McDinny, Dinny Nyilba. 1994. Interview with Elizabeth MacKinlay. Tape recording, Wandangula, 9 July _____1994. Interview with Elizabeth MacKinlay. Tape recording, Wandangula, 18 July. _____. 1994. Interview with Elizabeth MacKinlay. Tape recording, Wandangula, 24 July. McDinny, Dinny Nyilba, Nancy Ningana McDinny and Rachel Muyurrkulmanya McDinny. 1994. Interview with Elizabeth MacKinlay. Tape recording, Wandangula, 9 July. McDinny, Eileen 1995. Interview with Elizabeth MacKinlay. Tape recording, Darwin, 24 April. _____. 1995. Interview with Elizabeth MacKinlay. Tape recording, Darwin, 26 April. _____. 1995. Interview with Elizabeth MacKinlay. Tape recording, Darwin, 27 April. _____. 1995. Interview with Elizabeth MacKinlay. Tape recording, Darwin, 1 May.. _____. 1995. Interview with Elizabeth MacKinlay. Tape recording, Darwin, 2 May. _____. 1995 Interview with Elizabeth MacKinlay. Tape recording, Darwin, 4 May. McDinny, Eileen Manankurrmara and Jemima Wuwarlu Miller. 1995. Interview with Elizabeth MacKinlay. Tape recording, Darwin, 24 April. McDinny, Nancy 1994. Interview with Elizabeth MacKinlay. Tape recording, Wandangula, 8 July. _____ 1994. Interview with Elizabeth MacKinlay. Tape recording, Wandangula, 9 July. _____. 1994. Interview with Elizabeth MacKinlay. Wandangula, 11 July. _____. 1994. Interview with Elizabeth MacKinlay. Tape recording, Wandangula, 18 July. _____. 1994. Interview with Elizabeth MacKinlay. Tape recording, Wandangula, 24 July. McDinny, Nancy Ningana, Rachel Muyurrkulmanya McDinny and Myra Rory . 1994. Interview with Elizabeth MacKinlay. Tape recording, Wandangula, 18 July. McDinny, Nancy Ningana, Rachel Muyurrkulmanya McDinny and Jemima Wuwarlu Miller. 1994. Interview with Elizabeth MacKinlay. Tape recording, Wandangula, 24 July. McDinny, Rachel Muyurrkulmanya 1994. Interview with Elizabeth MacKinlay. Tape recording, Wandangula, 9 July. _____ 1994. Interview with Elizabeth MacKinlay. Wandangula, 10 July. _____. 1994. Interview with Elizabeth MacKinlay. Tape recording, Wandangula, 18 July. _____. 1994. Interview with Elizabeth MacKinlay. Tape recording, Wandangula, 24 July. Miller, Jemima Wuwarlu. 1994. Interview with Elizabeth MacKinlay. Tape recording, Wandangula, 8 July. _____. 1994. Interview with Elizabeth MacKinlay. Tape recording, Wandangula, 11 July. _____. 1994. Interview with Elizabeth MacKinlay. Tape recording, Wandangula, 24 July. _____. 1995. Interview with Elizabeth MacKinlay. Tape recording, Darwin, 24 April. _____. 1995. Interview with Elizabeth MacKinlay. Tape recording, Darwin, 26 April. _____. 1995. Interview with Elizabeth MacKinlay. Tape recording, Darwin, 27 April. _____. 1995. Interview with Elizabeth MacKinlay. Tape recording, Darwin, 1 May. _____. 1995. Interview with Elizabeth MacKinlay. Tape recording, Darwin, 2 May. _____. 1995. Interview with Elizabeth MacKinlay. Tape recording, Darwin, 4 May. Moyle, Alice M. with Jacko. 1966. Yanyula Corroboree Songs. Field recording. Doomadgee, Queensland. Moyle, Alice M. 1964. Songs from the Northern Territory. Five 12" LP discs, IAS M-001-5. Sound recording and accompanying booklet. Canberra: Australian Institute of Aboriginal Studies. _____. 1978. Aboriginal Sound Instruments. One 12" LP disc, AIAS/14. Sound recording and accompanying booklet. Canberra: Australian Institute of Aboriginal Studies. Pyro, Topsy. 1994. Interview with Elizabeth MacKinlay. Wandangula, 11 July. Reay, Marie with Anyula, Garawa women. 1960. Women's Guridja. Field recording. Borroloola, Rory, Myra. 1994. Interview with Elizabeth MacKinlay. Tape recording, Wandangula, 18 July 1994.Northern Territory.Manuscripts (see AIATSIS archives printout) Belfrage, Hugh: (Transcriptions and translations of some field tapes, plus elicited material, plus some reworked untranslated texts etc.
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