Making Tuba in the Torres Strait Islands: The Cultural Diffusion and Geographic Mobility of an Alcoholic Drink

Date

2010

Authors

Brady, Margaret
McGrath, Vic

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

Carfax Publishing, Taylor & Francis Group

Abstract

There is relatively scant evidence of the Indigenous production and consumption of intoxicating drinks on the Australian mainland prior to the arrival of outsiders. Although Australian Aboriginal peoples had mastered fermentation in some regions, the Indigenous manufacture of much stronger drinks by distillation was unknown on the Australian mainland. However, following contact with Pacific Island and Southeast Asian peoples in the 19th century, Islanders in the Torres Strait adopted techniques for fermenting and distilling what became a quasi-indigenous alcoholic drink known as tuba. This paper discusses the historical process of the diffusion of this substance as a result of labour migration and internationalisation in the Strait, and provides present-day accounts of tuba production from Torres Strait Islanders.

Description

Keywords

Keywords: Aborigine; alcoholic beverage; Australia; catering service; commercial phenomena; crop; cultural anthropology; distillation; drinking behavior; education; ethnic group; ethnology; fermentation; history; human; international cooperation; legal aspect; psyc

Citation

Source

Journal of Pacific History

Type

Journal article

Book Title

Entity type

Access Statement

License Rights

Restricted until

2037-12-31