Containers of power: fibre forms from Northeast Arnhem Land Australia
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Hamby, M. Louise
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Canberra, ACT : The Australian National University
Abstract
This thesis is a study of fibre container forms primarily made by women today in
Arnhem Land. It investigates a complex set of relationships between the forms,
mainly baskets, bags and mats, their makers and users, their functions, their
morphology, their manufacture, and history. It does this within the cultural context
of Yolηu cosmology with emphasis on the belief system and relationship of the
forms to other items of material culture. Although the majority of the contemporary
material for this study is from Gapuwiyak in eastern Arnhem Land it draws upon
work from the entirety of Arnhem Land, historical and contemporary. My theoretical
approach is one in which I consider these objects as having cultural biographies.
It also examines the resonances of terminology and symbolism between the human
and bathi corpus. In this context the processes that are involved in their making
and use are essential in establishing the position of bathi in the community. In this
thesis I argue that bathi are powerful and meaningful objects for makers and users
and are one of the key means by which to access and understand Aboriginal
cosmology from northeast Arnhem Land.
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Restricted until
2033-11-25