Is a village a village if no one lives there? Negotiated histories on Mabuyag in the Western Torres Strait
Abstract
Partnership (or community) archaeology has become increasingly prominent in the Australia/
Pacific region (see Marshall 2002 and McNiven and Russell 2005). A community-led approach
acknowledges the importance of indigenous control of the cultural-heritage process. This is
designed to enable indigenous communities to ‘maintain or establish community pride, cohesion
and identity’, as well as creating a ‘more nuanced and textured view of the past’ (Smith 1999;
Nicholas 2000; McNiven and Russell 2005:244; Smith and Wobst 2005).
Divergent ‘symbolic and metaphoric strategies’ in oral history and archaeology are likely to
result in the creation of different histories (McNiven and Russell 2005:248). This may be further
influenced by methodological constraints (e.g. the validity, accuracy and representativeness of
oral/archaeological histories) or the reluctance of communities to divulge secrets about their
sites and practices (Sand 2000:68; McNiven and Russell 2005:48). When archaeological and
ethnographic results do not correspond it is important to avoid both selective criticism of oral
histories and censoring of instances where archaeology conflicts with oral accounts (Allen 1983:8;
Echo-Hawk 1997; McNiven and Russell 2005:256). Partnership archaeology recognises that the
cultural-heritage process requires ongoing negotiation between indigenous and archaeological
communities, and in some cases the alteration of existing indigenous and/or non-indigenous
cosmologies and methodologies (Nicholas 2000; McNiven and Russell 2005:248; Smith and
Wobst 2005).
In 2001, a community project was initiated in the western Torres Strait to track ‘archaeological
signatures of ethnographically documented cultural practices back from a recent to a more
distant past’ (David and McNiven 2004:203). As well as providing significant information
on key points of cultural change, it has also provided a case study about community-based
archaeology and the methods used to explore prehistoric sites and cultural material (e.g. McNiven
and Feldman 2003; David et al. 2004; McNiven et al. 2009). This paper stems from doctoral research conducted during the Western Torres Strait cultural history project. It negotiates the
competing histories for two ethnographically prominent ‘villages’, Wagadagam and Maidh, on
Mabuyag in the central western Torres Strait.
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Pacific Island Heritage: Archaeology, identity and community (Terra Australis 35)
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Open Access via publisher website